“I had expected you earlier. You can’t imagine how long I have been standing here.”
At first Clio did not know him, in his dark suit with the cap pulled low over his forehead. But then recognition dawned and she fought even harder.
“Get away. Let me go. You must let me go.” Her voice was desperate, almost pleading.
He had not planned to reveal himself, had planned merely to follow her, see where she went, before letting her know he was there. It was the plan he had devised that afternoon, after he had followed her back to her house, but the way she had looked when she ran out the door, the dangerous expression on her face, changed his mind. Now he held her at an arm’s length and examined her.
“Clio,” Miles asked with genuine concern. “What is wrong? Has someone hurt you?”
Clio shook her head tensely. “I am fine. Just let me go. Please. Leave me alone. I must be alone.”
Her eyes were wild, and refused to meet Miles’s gaze.
“Clio, you are not fine. You must—”
“I would be if you would just leave me the hell alone,” she spat at him. “Get away from me. Don’t you understand? Don’t you see that I am dangerous? That I am wicked? That I will hurt you.” Her voice changed. “Oh, God, Lord Dearbourn, for your own good, you must go away.”
“What do you mean you are dangerous?”
Tears were running down Clio’s cheeks. “I am the vampire, my lord. I am the killer.”
Miles looked at her in silence for a moment. “That is not possible.” Then, his eyes narrowed. “Is this some sort of jest?”
Clio’s face changed again, this time into a malevolent smile. “You think so, my lord? Not possible? Come and see.” She began to lead the way across the street, then stopped. “But you must promise me, after you do, that you will do nothing to stop me from turning myself in. That you will see to it I am not left alone until I am in custody. Do you promise?”
Miles nodded.
“No,” Clio insisted. “You must say the words.”
“I promise. I promise I will not leave your side until you are turned in,” Miles assured her, and she took his arm and led him into her house. Instead of turning left into her office as he had done that day, they went directly up two flights of stairs. They turned, then passed through a crooked doorway.
Two strides took Miles to the side of the bed. His eyes, already adjusted to the dark, spotted the dark pricks on the girl’s neck immediately.
He swung around to face Clio. “When did you do this?”
Her eyes looked strange, dangerous, again. “I don’t know. I woke there,” she pointed to the chair, “and found her as you see her now. But there can be no question it was me. This is my room.”
“What do you mean you ‘found her’? Didn’t you put her there?”
Clio shrugged. “I have no recollection. I can’t remember anything that happened tonight. But I suppose that makes sense. I suppose my mind blotted it out. That is the logical explanation. It would also explain why I did not remember killing the other girl, two days ago.”
“That, or the fact that you did not kill either of them,” Miles pointed out. He turned back to the bed and leaned over the corpse. At first he thought the girl had a bruise on her cheek, but he saw it was just a flower-shaped birth mark. She did have rings of bruises on her wrists, however, and scrapes on her knees and shins below the hem of her gown. The gardenia was clutched in one of her hands, but the other was closed, in a fist. He took it and pried it open.
“Light a candle,” he instructed without turning around.
Clio did not know why, but she obeyed him, then moved with the taper to his side. In his hand he held a small lead token, of the type sold as collectable souvenirs at major fairs. Each fair minted its own tokens and impressed its own logo on. them. This one showed a crude portrait of the queen, marking it as a token of the once-a-year fair that had opened that day in Smithfield, just outside the walls of London.
“Have you been to the Jubilee Fair?” Miles asked Clio.
“Not in my right mind. There is no telling what I might have been doing out of it,” she answered bitterly.
He turned to face her. “I do not believe that you killed this woman.”
“Why?”
“For one thing, because I have been standing outside your door all night.” When she opened her mouth to protest, he rushed on. “There is no way you could have entered, or left, by that means. So you would have had to come through there—” he gestured toward the window whose shutter continued to moan weakly in the wind, “—dragging the girl behind you. Which seems unlikely given that she is heavier and nearly a head taller than you are.”
“Why couldn’t I simply have induced her to walk up with me? Why would I have had to drag her?”
“Look at these marks.” Miles pointed to the scrapes that ran up the girl’s shins and over her knees. “Unless I am mistaken, we shall find that they match in width the supports of the ladder that is leaning against the house outside your window.” Clio looked out the window and noticed for the first time the ladder Mr. Williams had been using that morning in rehearsal. But how had Miles noticed? Before she could ask, he went on. “For another, the last time I saw a vampire, his mouth was dripping with blood. There is not a spot of blood on you except a touch on your lips and that is because they are so dry they have begun to crack. Besides, if you did kill her, why would you bring her to your house? Your room?”
“Perhaps I was trying to show myself. So I would know. I read about a madwoman doing something like that once. She did all these horrible things and never remembered any of it, it was as if she were possessed by a demon. And each time the demon got more powerful until finally he was going to take her over and the way he did that was by showing her all the evil she had done. Perhaps the vampire part of me is getting stronger.”
“I think it is more likely that the vampire wants to make it look like you are responsible for the deaths of those girls than that you are possessed.”
“Why would the vampire do that?”
“Shift the blame. It would be a good way to get you, and anyone to whom you reported the news that you were the vampire—say the Special Commissioner—to stop investigating.”
“But if I were arrested or turned myself in and another girl was killed, then it would be clear it was not me,” Clio pointed out. “This would only work for a short time.”
Miles glanced outside and saw the waning moon low on the horizon. “Perhaps that is enough.” He crossed to Clio’s armoire and opened it. “Are these the only gowns you own? This old one and the tattered one you are wearing?”
It took Clio a moment to realize what he was doing. “I am sorry if my wardrobe does not meet with your approval, my lord,” she answered acerbically. “If I had known you would be pawing my clothes, I would have improved the selection, I assure you.”
Miles almost smiled with relief. She had begun to sound, and even look, like Clio again. “It rained tonight. If you had been out of the house, your clothes would have been wet. The girl’s dress is wet. But it seems that your entire wardrobe is dry.”
He was right. Her clothes were all dry and the girl’s were wet and that meant that she had not dragged the girl there, had not been out of her house.
But she could have had another set of clothes. A vampire outfit. An ensemble she left stashed somewhere. And—
“There is something else, my lord.”
Miles, who had again been looking at the girl’s body, faced Clio. “What?”
“My ankle. When I woke up, it was sore, and in a bandage. But I don’t remember having done anything to it.”
“What do you remember of yesterday?”
“Not very much,” Clio said, avoiding his eyes. Not anything about his lips. Or about what it was like to kiss him. “I spent the afternoon in my study and dined and then fell asleep. But downstairs. Not here. I do not remember coming to bed.”
“Perhaps you tripped on your way up the stairs.”
It was not impossible. Indeed, it was distinctly possible. But it also seemed like the sort of thing she would remember.
“Did you drink anything?” Miles asked.
“Are you suggesting I drank too much? That I was drun—”
Miles interrupted. “No, you hardly seem like the type to gulp down a decanter of sack.” And you should know. “I was wondering if your drowsiness might have been induced. It is easier to put a sleeping powder in wine than in food.”
“You think someone drugged me?”
“It is a possibility. Can you think of anyone in your household who would do that? Your cook, or baker, or footman?”
The degree to which he had misestimated the size of her staff almost made Clio laugh. “Why not the yeoman of the buttery?” she asked earnestly.
A crease appeared between Miles’s brow. “It could be him, certainly. I did not see a butter shed outside so—”
“You are right. We have no buttery. I guess that rules him out. And also the idea that I was drugged. At least by anyone in my household. Besides, the cake I ate was not made here. It was delivered by special messenger in a basket of food.”
“Who was it from?” Miles demanded.
“A very good friend. Someone who would have no interest in drugging me.”
“Are you sure?”
“I don’t know about your friends, my lord, and I can already see the appeal of drugging you myself, but I am fairly sure that none of my friends would be up to it.”
“That is too bad.”
“Why, would you prefer that I were drugged? Is that how you like your women?”
“Oh yes,” Miles replied with such apparent sincerity that for a moment it looked like Clio might explode. “Actually, I had something else in mind. As I see it, there is only one good explanation of what happened: Someone—most likely the vampire—waited until they could be sure you were asleep, then dragged a body up through your window. Very few people would undertake that kind of operation unless they could be assured that you would not wake up. A convenient way to ensure that would be to send you drugged food. A readily available herb like mandragora would do the trick perfectly.”
He was right, but that was not what made Clio’s eyes grow huge. “The vampire was here,” she said, almost whispering. “If I am not the vampire, he was here, in this room, tonight. With me.” Clio shuddered, then looked right at Miles. “But if he was,” Clio went on, “why didn’t he kill me?”
Miles opened his mouth, and then closed it. He did not know. Nor did he know why he was so damn hell-bent on convincing Clio Thornton that she was not a vampire. Perhaps she was. He could use a drink. Maybe there was more than one of them, maybe he had killed the Vampire of London last time and Clio was merely a replacement. But somehow he did not believe it. Clio was a connection to the vampire, but not the vampire herself.
Or at least he hoped not.
Where had that come from? He did not care what happened to Clio Thornton. Liar! No matter how brave she was, no matter how smart, and how—No matter what, she was not his responsibility. He had given that up, the kind of caring that engendered responsibility, with Beatrice’s death. He looked around for a carafe of wine. The only duty he owed now was to his queen, to find the vampire. That was the only reason he was staying so close to Clio. That and the fact that he did not want her death on his conscience. The only reason he had hovered around her house all night was to be sure that nothing happened to her.
But something had happened. He saw her watching him, the strain showing on her lovely face.
No. She was not his responsibility. She had refused his help that afternoon, flat out. She was damn lucky that he had decided to spend the night in the shadows next to her house at all. If he hadn’t been there, who knew what she would have done, he asked himself. But his conscience would not relent. This is your fault. He remembered the tears running down her face when she first ran out of her house. You failed.
“Do you have a manservant you can summon?” he asked abruptly. His manner was cool, condescending even, and the question sounded more like a command.
Clio blinked at the change in him. “Why?”
“I want to send him to get my carriage. You can’t walk all the way to Dearbourn Hall with your ankle like that, and I doubt you would let me carry you.”
“You are absolutely right, I wouldn’t,” Clio said, outraged. “Nor can I imagine what makes you think I would go home with you. Why would I go anywhere with you?”
“You have no choice. I cannot protect you well enough if—”
“Is that what you call what you were doing in front of my house tonight? Protecting me?” Her tone was sarcastic.
“No. I was spying on you. Since you wouldn’t allow me to work with you, I thought I would watch you work. See where you went. What you did.”
“You admit it?”
“I can deny it. If you prefer I can say that I thought ten pounds was a rather steep price to pay for a few minutes of your time and I wanted to be sure I got my money’s worth.”
“That’s strange,” Clio hissed. “I felt the ten pounds was only marginally adequate compensation for having to spend that long with you.” Then she reached behind her back and began untying the laces of her gown.
“What the devil are you doing?”
“I know how you feel about paying women who are dressed,” Clio explained. “I thought perhaps you would get your money’s worth more quickly if I took my gown off.” She had never done anything like this before in her life and she flushed red with anger.
Her pinafore and overskirt fell to the floor, leaving her standing in only a knee-length chemise. It had been fine once, but years of wear had made it almost transparent.
It was a good thing Miles no longer felt desire (liar) because if he did he would probably have been feeling it. Damn he wished he had a drink. The room suddenly drew itself in and became smaller, cramped, as if the air were heavier, as if it were somehow compelling them to stand closer together.
There was something about seeing her standing like that, so small and fragile and unutterably beautiful, that sliced through Miles’s anger. “That won’t be necessary,” he managed to choke out before she pulled her chemise over her head. “I think we are all settled up.”
“Good,” Clio said with a sharp nod, releasing the hem of the gown. “Then there is nothing to keep you here. You may go.”
Yes. He should go. She did not need him. And he definitely did not need her. Mucking around with his investigation. Interfering with his life, making his breeches feel like they had shrunk ten inches in the past two minutes. What was it, six in the morning, and he had not yet been to bed? It was not as though he did not have more important things to be doing. What was he thinking, wasting his time pacing up and down in front of her house?
But there was definitely some connection between her and the vampire, and he had to find out what it was.
“I cannot just go.” Miles did not sound apologetic. “You see, I promised to stay with you until you were in custody.”
Clio waved that away. “That is not important anymore.”
“I am sorry, Lady Thornton, but a man of honor always keeps his promises.”
“A man of honor does not torment innocent women by throwing promises they extracted during moments of strain back in their faces,” Clio pointed out hotly.
“It is an interesting point,” Miles acknowledged. “But you are wrong. I am bound. You are stuck with me.” Clio opened her mouth to say something, no doubt comparing him unfavorably with a foxhound, but he cut her off. He was rather enjoying himself now. “Even without my promise, you have to concede that it would be irresponsible of me to leave an admitted fiend alone to do more harm.”
“I am not a fiend. You said so yourself.”
“And you said yourself ‘I am the vampire.’ ”
“But that was before. Everything has changed.”
Miles raised an eyebrow. “Has it? Are you really convinced?”
Clio bit her lip and turned to look out the window into the waning night, hugging her arms around her. The stars still glimmered faintly and the sky was the vibrant blue that marked the moment just before dawn. Until recently, this was a time of day that always made Clio a little sad because it marked the end of the night. She loved the night, loved the stillness of the city air and the velvety darkness, loved the glow of the moon and the twinkle of fireflies. At night, anything seemed possible. It was only during the day that reality took hold, that reason and logic reasserted themselves, that all her hopes and dreams seemed impossible once again. But now this had happened and the peace she had felt at night vanished. Would she ever get it back?
If I am not the vampire, why didn’t he kill me?
You are not what you think you are.
What did it all mean?
The simplest explanation is the best, Clio had learned in her investigations. And the simplest explanation certainly was not that her friend Elwood had drugged her, dragged a dead woman up a ladder into her room, and left the lifeless body lying across her mattress with a white gardenia in its hand. No, the simplest explanation was that she herself was the vampire.
“I can prove you are not,” Miles said then, as if he had heard her thoughts. “I can show you that you are not the vampire, but you will have to obey me.”
Clio turned to face him. “How?”
Miles did not know why he had not thought of it sooner. It was the perfect means of keeping an eye on her. Keeping her safe. “You suggested the method yourself: If you were locked up and another body surfaced, it would be clear you were not the vampire. Correct?”
Clio thought for a moment, then nodded.
“Therefore you have two options: Either I can take you to the constables, or rather,” he said, remembering a certain tone in her voice, “to the Special Commissioner, and have you locked up until another girl dies. Or, you can have me as your constant companion until then, but be able to continue your investigation. The choice is yours—the Special Commissioner, or me.” Miles added, “I would, of course, pay you for having to put up with my company.”
Clio narrowed her eyes at him. “I don’t want your money.”
“You will,” Miles assured her. “I know you will find it hard to believe at first, but I can be very bothersome. Tedious, even.”
“I can’t tell you how you surprise me.”
Miles ignored her. “I had to pay you ten pounds to compensate for inflicting myself on you for half an hour today,” Miles calculated, “so at that rate, two days would cost about a thousand pounds. Would five hundred up front, as a retainer, and five hundred when the job is done suit you? It should not take more than two days for another body to arrive. If it is longer, we can renegotiate.”
Clio stared at him, stunned. Five hundred pounds would pay off her debt to Captain Black. A thousand would keep Which House fed for years. It was an absurd sum to offer for a job of detection.
She was immediately wary. “Why are you doing this? Why do you care what I do? Where I am?”
“I don’t,” Miles answered bluntly. “I care about finding the vampire. As far as I can tell, whether you are the vampire or just the person he is trying to frame, you are the closest link I have to the truth.”
She remembered all the news sheets she had read from three years earlier. “Are you doing this because of Beatrice? Because you still love her and want to avenge her death?”
Something tensed in Miles’s cheek, but his voice stayed level. “You are very good at asking questions. That will be useful at the fair.”
Clio, who had opened her mouth to protest his change of subject, said instead, “The fair?”
“Yes. I propose that we start with a visit to the Jubilee Fairgrounds. Perhaps someone there can tell us who she—” he gestured at the dead girl on the bed, “—is, and who she left with last night. Perhaps someone there saw the real vampire.”
Clio might not have been to the fair, but she had read about it, and knew that by law it was supposed to close at midnight. “But it’s nearly dawn. Who will be there?”
“Everyone. It is only once the booths licensed by the crown have closed that the fair begins to get interesting.”
“I am only going along with this for the money,” she announced to him.
“Really? I thought it was my charm that convinced you,” Miles replied dryly.
Clio felt as though the reigns of the investigation had slipped away from her. For one final moment she considered telling him to take her to the Special Commissioner instead, but then the thought of his thousand pounds and what it could mean convinced her.
That and the fact that he might be the only thing standing between the innocent women of London and death at her hands.
Even in the kind, rosy light of dawn, the Jubilee Fair looked disreputable. The air was filled with shouts—people hawking everything from leather belts and knives to love, good breath, and long life—and scented with a mixture of lemons, roasted chickens, spilled ale, women’s perfume, and soot. The place was entirely singular, entirely unforgettable.
And entirely unfamiliar to Clio. She felt her spirits lift enormously. To her, even the hastily constructed shanties of Jubilee Fairgrounds looked beautiful because she was sure she had never been there before.
“This is the first time I have seen any of this,” she said to Miles as they walked between the stalls, Toast perched on her shoulder to avoid being trampled. The opening lines of an old ballad came unbidden to her mind. The first time I did see you dear, my heart in me did pound. I knew that day as I know—
“What are you humming?” Miles demanded sharply.
“Humming?” It took Clio a moment to realize that in her excitement, she had been. “It is something my nurse used to sing me to make me go to sleep,” she said. “I don’t even think it has a name.”
Miles nodded, but his eyes had a faraway look. “It is called ‘The First Time I Did See You Dear.’ A very good friend of mine used to sing it often.” It had been Beatrice’s favorite, one of the vestiges of her early life in the country. He used to love it when she sang it to him because he knew it meant she was happy, loved seeing the sweetness that still hovered unextinguished beneath her ever more polished exterior. Or at least, had until—
A woman in a red satin gown festooned with fake gems and ribbons barreled into him with a coy smile. “Good evening lovie,” she began with an exaggerated wink in Miles’s direction. “Look like you’re a man who could show a lass a good time. A real good time, if you know what I mean.” Before she could elaborate, her eyes fell upon Clio, and her smile vanished. An expression almost of terror took its place. “Oh. You. Never mind,” she said, hastily backing away before turning around and running into the crowd.
“I am sorry, my lord,” Clio said with a frown. Had the woman been afraid of her? “I seem to have scared her off. If you’d like, I can wait in the carriage.”
Miles looked down at her to be sure she was joking, and found she was not. “That won’t be necessary.”
“But she was beautiful,” Clio said, with real awe.
“I suppose some might think her beautiful.”
Clio frowned at him. “If you are trying to spare my feelings by understating your admiration, you need not, my lord.”
“Thank you. I shall remember that in the future.”
His eyes seemed to be laughing at her and Clio was suddenly strikingly aware that the man whose hand was on her elbow (The first time I did see you dear), the man who was looking at her with genuine interest in his intense golden eyes (My heart in me did pound), the man whose lips were close enough for her to touch (I knew that day as I know now), the man whose proximity was filling her head with old songs (That my true love I’d found)—that this man was her cousin’s fiancé, that he could never be hers, and that he was probably in love with Mariana just like everyone else.
Clio moved away abruptly. Bad girl she heard her grandmother screeching, and had to agree. Coming here, going anywhere, with the Viscount Dearbourn was a mistake. She would have been better off with the Special Commissioner. At least she would not have imagined kissing him, or kept wishing that she were beautiful, or had a lovely gown like the woman in red, a gown that made men swoon. What would it be like to be that sure of yourself, Clio wondered, remembering the woman’s smile at Miles. What would it be like to know you were beautiful, that people desired you, that they loved you?
“Like a slice of heaven” a voice answered her thoughts. Clio looked up and realized it was a question, not a statement, put forward by a man selling sweetmeats from a tray. “Rose water and almond paste and sugar, that’s what that is. Or perhaps a lemon-and-sugar sweet for the lady? She loves a good lemon sweet, I can tell you.”
How did he know that? Clio wondered.
Miles gave the man a coin, and selected three of the large lemons with hollow sugar straws in them, giving one to Clio and one to Toast.
“You’d better take the whole lot of ’em, if this is the smallest coin you got,” the sweet-seller told Miles.
Miles shrugged. “You keep the difference.”
The sweet-seller’s eyes grew wide. “You are a gentleman, sir, a true gentleman, and I thank you, sir.” He leaned over to Clio, who had been watching the exchange with perplexity, and said, “You done well this time, sweetheart.”
“Tell me,” Miles said, drawing the man’s attention. “Have you seen a girl with a birthmark in the shape of a flower on her cheek, here at the fair?”
The sweet-seller seemed to think for a moment, then shook his head. “Can’t say that I have, but then I don’t notice all of them. Now if she had a birthmark here,” he made a gesture toward a region below his neck and above his stomach, “that I mighta remembered.”
Clio and Miles got similar responses from a dozen other people they asked, including a man whose body was entirely wrapped in snakes, three girls who offered to paint birthmarks on their “cheeks” for Miles’s personal and private inspection, and a woman who proposed to sing a song that the girl with the birthmark would not be able to resist and would cause her to appear before them in a matter of minutes from anywhere in the world.
But despite these handsome offers, Clio felt increasingly uneasy as they pushed deeper into the fairgrounds. There was something in the way people eyed her that began slowly to erode her sense of relief.
“Try yer luck, win a brooch,” a stooped figure croaked from a booth next to her, and Clio jumped.
“Are you all right?” Miles asked. He had been watching her closely, and had seen her expression go from enjoyment to concern. “You look pale. Perhaps we should come back later.”
Clio shook her head. “No. Now. I want to find out now. Whatever there is to find out.”
“Three tries for a penny, sir,” the stooped figure went on. It appeared to be a woman, and if her looks were anything to go on, she was old enough to be one of the original Fates. “Try your luck and win a brooch. Guaranteed to bring long life to the winner. Try it for the lady, sir,” she cooed at Miles, blowing stale breath in his face and pressing three wooden balls into his hand. “Hazard is but a penny, sir, and all you have to do to win is get one of those balls into this basket.”
Miles shook his head.
“Almost the lady’s birthday, my lord. Brooch would make a fine present, it would,” the woman continued her sales pitch, and Miles was about to relent, merely so he would be allowed to leave, when he saw the color drain from Clio’s face.
He dropped a penny on the woman’s table, then put an arm around Clio and led her to one side of the crowd where a felled log provided a place for them to sit. “What is wrong?” he asked.
“She knew it was almost my birthday,” Clio stammered. “No one knows my birthday is tomorrow. I nearly forgot. How did she know that? How could she have known that? Unless I was here earlier and told her.”
Miles exhaled with relief and had to repress a smile. “Is that what is worrying you? What she said about your birthday?”
Clio’s eyes unclouded slightly in her surprise at his tone.
“I can assure you she says that to all her customers,” he went on. “Most of the couples you see strolling around here probably never met before tonight,” Miles explained, aiming for delicacy. “It is merely a ruse to get more people to spend more money. I suspect if you asked three quarters of those women they would say it was ‘almost’ their birthday, if it meant they could pry their companions’ purses open a bit wider.”
“You mean they are prostitutes? And she thought I was a prostitute also?” Clio asked.
“That is not what I meant to imply,” Miles said quickly. He braced himself for her anger.
“How marvelous!” Clio declared, smiling. “No one has ever thought anything like that about me before. I read in a book once that prostitution was the only honest life for a woman,” she rushed on. “Because there are no lies between a prostitute and her client, not like between a husband and wife or a man and his mistress.”
“I think Aretino meant that as a satire, not a suggestion,” Miles said quietly, astonished at her reading.
Clio ignored him, musing aloud. “Perhaps other people here think I am a prostitute as well. Perhaps it is only because I am with you that no one has approached me.”
“If you would like I can wait in the carriage,” Miles offered.
“Yes, perhaps that would be better,” she agreed quickly. “If you wouldn’t mind.”
“Lady Thornton, I will have to insist—”
Clio burst into laughter. “I was only fooling, my lord. You need not look so ghastly.” Clio leaned in and scrutinized him. “I don’t know how you do that. You seem to grow both taller and older simultaneously.”
Her face was too close to his. Her eyes, her nose, her lips. The curve of her eyelashes over her cheek when she blinked. The angle of her chin. Her playful smile, her even teeth, the dry crack on her bottom lip, the wisp of her hair that had escaped from its pins and hung between their faces, the slight flush on her cheeks, the smell of roses, the line of her smooth neck, the question in her eyes—Miles was aware of all of them, aware with every inch of skin on his body. He reached out with a finger, caught the truant tendril of hair, and pushed it back behind her ear.
Then he stood up, pulling her up with him. “We should go.”
Clio’s mind buzzed confusingly for a moment. “But we have not learned who the girl is,” she reminded him. “Or who she was seen with.”
“We’ll have to do that another way. I think I am too tired—”
A man careened out of one of the establishments along the back wall of the fair, known as Sinner’s Alley, stumbled against Clio and then fell, unconscious, at her feet. Before she could bend over to make sure he was still breathing, another man, face red with anger, followed him out of the establishment, wielding a twig broom.
“Don’t come back until you can pay,” the broom-brandishing man yelled at the man on the ground, whacking him a few times for good measure. “I ain’t running a church here, Ginny, so we don’t give out no charity.” He raised the broom to give Ginny another whack, and found it stuck.
“I think he’s gotten the message,” Miles told the man from behind.
“This ain’t none of your business, sir,” the broom-brandisher told him, swinging around and giving Ginny a chance to crawl to safety. “Ain’t nothing to do with—” He broke off, spotting Clio. A smile spread over his face. “Well I say. I knew you’d be back. I told Flora so, I did. We’ll see her again, I said. And there you are.”
Clio looked behind her to see who the man could be speaking to, then raised a hand to her chest. “Me?”
“You think I mean some other pretty young thing with a monkey? Hell, lass, I haven’t seen anyone get taken with the flavor like you since my own Mary, rest her soul.”
“You must be mistaken,” Clio said. “I have never been here before.”
The man looked skeptically from her to Miles. Then he winked. “You got nothing to worry about. He won’t care if you was here earlier. The gentry all love my place. They all got a bit of the hunger for it, too. Don’t you agree, sir?”
Miles, who seemed to be paying only marginal attention, said, “Oh yes. Of course. You are very correct.”
“Told you.” The broom brandisher shot another wink in Clio’s direction. “No need to hide it from him. We’ll not tell him how much you won though, that can be our secret. But you best come inside so you’re not standing on that ankle of yours.”
“What did you say?” Clio demanded.
“It must be hurting something fierce after that fall you took trying to get closer to the pit,” the man elaborated. “You’d do well to sit down.”
“You know about my ankle?” Clio asked. Her voice was strangely hoarse.
“Course I do. Didn’t I have my Flora bandage it up herself. Didn’t I have her—”
“Flora,” Clio repeated the name. Her face was ashen. “You call her that because she has a birthmark in the shape of a flower on her cheek.”
The man nodded. “It was my sister’s idea. She’s buried now, near the old house in Devonshire, but she left me Flora. Thought the flower on the girl’s cheek meant good luck. And the girl has been good luck, at least for me. Never was another who could sing so sweetly. Makes a man’s heart glad to hear her.”
“Where is your niece now?” Miles asked abruptly.
“Last I saw her I think she was going to bed,” the man told him. “That’s where all good girls ought to be now. Excepting those who have the taste like your friend here. Once you got the taste, you don’t want to sleep or eat or do anything. The taste gets into you and you always got to have more.”
“What taste?” Clio half whispered. “The taste for what?”
“What taste?” The red faced man laughed at the ridiculous question. “Why, the taste for blood.”