Splendors and Glooms (11 page)

Read Splendors and Glooms Online

Authors: Laura Amy Schlitz

At first there was nothing to see, only a splotch of dim white — the reflection of her nightdress — and a constellation of tiny flames. Cassandra yawned. She had never been gifted at crystal gazing, and before five minutes had passed, she had given up the struggle to concentrate. Her eyelids drooped. Then her head jerked upward and her eyes grew wide. A mist was rising inside the glass globe.

Inside the mist was a city — not Venice, with its soft colors and shimmering water, but London, with its lead-gray fogs; and in London, Grisini — not the enchanted prince of her dreams, but Grisini as he might be now: cadaverous, seedy, and no longer young. Beside him were three small and shadowy figures. Cassandra clicked her tongue in frustration. She could not understand what the children were doing there. But the crystal, unlike her sleeping mind, did not lie. If the crystal foretold the future, the mysterious children had some role to play in her life — and so did Grisini. Always she came back to Grisini, with his claim to secret knowledge, his damnable
unless.

Cassandra shoved her chair back. She was too weary to think anymore. She heaved herself onto her feet — and stepped back.

The mirrors around her were alive. Each mirror held a wraith of a woman, burning. The sheets of glass reflected the image over and over again, like colored beads in a kaleidoscope. Cassandra lifted her hands to cover her eyes. The women lifted their arms with her. Each pair of blazing hands moved in rhythm with her hands. Each tortured face was her own — and as she recoiled from them, she smelled smoke.

Cassandra gave a great wild cry. Her hand flew to the locket at her breast. She shut her eyes and willed the vision — if vision it was — to
stop.
She told herself that it could not be happening — it must not happen, not ever; she must not burn.

She felt a breath of cooler air and opened her eyes. The figures in the mirror were no longer clear; as she watched them, they became translucent and drifted away like smoke. Cassandra let out her breath. It had been a waking nightmare, no more. There was still time to save herself from a fiery death.

She tightened her grip on the fire opal. It tingled as if it were alive and eager to serve her.

She opened her lips and spoke Grisini’s name.

I
n the gin palace of the Juniper Bough, Grisini swayed and set down his glass. A red mist glowed around him; his skin prickled and felt hot, as if he stood before the mouth of a great furnace. Then the sensation passed.

He reached for his glass of gin. He had drunk scarcely a tablespoon, knowing that he must keep his wits about him. Now he took a large swallow, fixing his eyes on the clock across the room. It had stopped an hour and a half ago, as he had reason to know: he had tampered with the pendulum. If policemen came tomorrow and asked the landlady of the Juniper Bough what time he came or left, she would be unable to answer them.

He reached in his pocket and took out the automaton watch. It was almost nine o’clock, and he wanted to see the hour strike. He cherished a childish fancy that someday the machinery might jam so that the wolf could capture its prey. He imagined the tiny jaws tearing at the swan’s feathers; he pictured drops of ruby-bright blood, smaller than grains of sand. He even wondered if such a drama could be engineered, if in all of London there were a clock maker who could alter the works so that the wolf might bite the swan.

He returned the watch to his pocket, reviewing his plans. In another quarter of an hour, he would head back to his lodgings at Mrs. Pinchbeck’s. There he would assume the disguise he had contrived and take a hackney coach westward, toward the cemetery at Kensal Green.

He congratulated himself on the excellence of his plan. He had chosen his victim well. Dr. Wintermute could be relied upon to pay Clara’s ransom; a man who had lost four children would stop at nothing to rescue the fifth. Not until the following morning would the doctor understand that his daughter was never coming home. It tickled Grisini to think that he had forced Dr. Wintermute to spend the night in the cemetery where his children had been buried. It was a masterstroke, the kind of inspired touch that made Grisini an artist in crime.

He thought hungrily of the ransom money. Ten thousand pounds. Enough money to leave London and live abroad in luxury. Grisini tilted the glass so that the last drop of gin fell on his tongue. He missed Venice but dared not return there. The Venetian police bore him a grudge; so did the authorities of Austria and Spain. He had no wish to return to France, where he had been imprisoned for fourteen years. After weighing the remaining choices, he had booked passage on a ship to Madeira. He wanted the sun. He hated the northern winters, and he was sick to death of fog.

A wave of intense heat broke over him. He swayed, clinging to the counter for balance. One hand came up to his face, tracing a pattern of old scars: furrows where a woman had raked him with her claws. It had happened thirty-eight years ago, in Venice. He had nearly lost an eye.

The scar tissue tingled, but his cheeks were dry. The old wounds had not reopened. He blinked, and the red fog around him cleared.

He raised the empty glass to his lips. His hand was shaking. Why should Cassandra Sagredo summon him after so many years? The thing was unlikely, impossible. Why now, when he was happy in his thoughts, envisioning Madeira and ten thousand pounds?

He set down the empty glass and left the Juniper Bough. After the frowst of the gin palace, the cold of the streets was piercing. It seemed to Grisini that the fog had crept into his bones. He was not well. In the past months, he had been troubled by a hoarse cough and restless nights. He was afraid his lungs were not strong.

He was also deeply bored. Even the puppet theatre failed to amuse him. He was willing to abandon it, and eager to be rid of the two children who worked for him. He knew he would never find a boy who suited him better than Parsefall did — the boy’s hands were wonderfully deft — but he found he didn’t care. He looked forward to a life of idleness, with servants to attend him instead of children.

“Gaspare! Gaspare Grisini!”

He stopped in the middle of the street. It was as if Cassandra had thrown a noose around his neck and yanked it tight. He felt her presence. He even smelled the scent she used to wear: a nauseous blend of myrrh and musk roses.

“Gaspare! I want you!”

He spun like the needle of a compass. If he did not obey her, she could make him bleed. He recalled the night they had parted, when she clawed his face and laid her curse on him. The blood had streamed from him, ounce after precious ounce, pint after pint, not clotting, but flowing in eight crimson streams.

“You come, Gaspare! I summon you!”

He lurched forward as if she had released the halter around his throat. As he stumbled through the streets, pictures swam into his mind. He must go north. He would have to go to a railway station, and he knew which one; in his mind’s eye, he saw the great arches and tunnels of King’s Cross. He glimpsed his destination: a landscape of dark fells and silver lakes. A castle of red sandstone rose before him.

He heard footsteps. He imagined Cassandra tracking him, like Hecate with her pack of hounds, and he panicked. He spied a narrow alley to the left of him and ducked into it, wrapping his arms around his chest as if he could squeeze himself into invisibility. He realized that he was panting and shut his mouth to muffle the sound.

The footsteps passed.

Grisini stifled a gasp of relief. Once again, he touched his cheeks, making sure that the wounds had not opened. All at once he recalled his appointment with Dr. Wintermute, and the ten thousand pounds he was about to lose. Ten thousand pounds! He could have screamed with frustration. Why must Cassandra summon him now? Another night — just one — and he would have ten thousand pounds —

His fingers curled into fists. If he could disobey her — for three hours, three little hours, just long enough to collect Clara’s ransom . . . In the old days, it would not have been possible. But the witch had grown older; the power of her summons was not as strong as it had once been. Perhaps he could manage it.

He felt his pulses quicken. He had always been a gambler, and though his heart raced with fear, the situation was not without its savor. He turned his footsteps homeward and doubled his pace. He was so intent on his purpose that he was nearly home before he saw the man who followed him through the streets.

P
arsefall was rehearsing. He was trying to learn the dance of the ballerina puppet, which Grisini had refused to teach him. Grisini was fond of taunting his apprentice; he was willing to admit that Parsefall had mastered the skeleton dance, but the ballet was more difficult, requiring the finesse of a true artist. The insult ate deep into Parsefall’s soul. Whenever Grisini set off for the Juniper Bough, Parsefall took the dancer from her muslin bag and practiced. He was determined to prove Grisini wrong.

He propped a mirror against the side of Lizzie Rose’s bedroom, positioning it so that he could watch the puppet’s movements. He would have liked to practice close to the fire, but Lizzie Rose had laid claim to that territory. She had hauled a basin of water upstairs and was heating a kettle on the hob. Parsefall rolled his eyes at her. Lizzie Rose’s propensity for washing things struck him as insane. He was glad he knew better than to waste time like that.

He stood on a chair — he was shorter than Grisini, and the puppet’s strings were too long for him. He lifted the perch of the little dancer, and she swung like a child on a swing. He waited patiently until she was still. Then he pulled the hand string. The ballerina raised her arms.

Parsefall began to hum the music of the dance, keeping his eyes on the mirror. He was dissatisfied: the puppet jerked with every move. Though she was beautifully balanced, she was rather light; if she were his, he would experiment with adding weight to her hips. He steadied her and relaxed his hands. The slow, supple movements, each melting into the next, required an almost superhuman delicacy and control. He swore under his breath.

“Don’t swear,” said Lizzie Rose automatically. “It’s vulgar.”

“Vulgar be blowed,” countered Parsefall. He knew that Lizzie Rose was only pretending to be shocked. She didn’t think swearing was as sinful as stealing, or thumbing through Grisini’s pictures of naked ladies. “Listen, Foxy-Loxy, would you get the fiddle and play for me?”

“I’m not Foxy-Loxy,” Lizzie Rose said between her teeth. “And I’m busy. I’m going to wash Ruby.”

Parsefall wrinkled his nose at her. The day before, Ruby had discovered the source of the foul smell in Mrs. Pinchbeck’s kitchen. The little spaniel had found a dead rat behind the stove and dragged it forth in triumph. Before eating it — and being extremely sick — Ruby had celebrated by rolling over and over on her prey. The smell was so vile that the dog had been shut in the cellar ever since.

“She’ll ’ate it,” Parsefall predicted.

“She hates being alone in the cellar,” Lizzie Rose countered. “She’s been crying all day, poor thing.”

“I’m tryin’ to
rehearse,
” Parsefall said in an aggrieved tone of voice. “That’s more important than washin’ a dirty dog.”

Lizzie Rose rolled up her sleeves. “You wouldn’t think so if she slept in your bed.”

Parsefall shrugged, giving up. He tugged the string for the dancer’s leg, easing her into an arabesque. The standing leg left the floor. He sighed and started over, humming creakily. By the time Lizzie Rose had the dog in the bath, he was beginning to make progress.

A door slammed downstairs. Parsefall dropped the puppet. The dogs in Mrs. Pinchbeck’s lodgings emitted an earsplitting series of barks and yaps. Ruby leaped out of the basin and raced around the room, spraying the carpet with water.

Parsefall yelped. The dog was headed for his puppet. He snatched up the dancer by one leg, forgetting what he had known since the age of six: a string puppet should always be picked up by its control. The strings tangled. Parsefall shoved the ballerina under a chair so that Grisini would not see.

The door burst open, and Grisini came in.

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