Chapter 1

London, Summer 1920

Nothing captures a woman’s attention quite as well as two muscular men who’ve dispensed with their shirts to perform a physical activity. Daisy and I couldn’t take our gazes off the sight of Gabe and Alex as they changed a tire on the Vauxhall Prince Henry. Almost three hours into our journey from London to Ipswich, a puncture had forced us to pull over. Gabe suggested we use the unscheduled stop to have our picnic lunch, so Daisy and I found a shady spot on a gently sloping grassy bank where we laid out the blanket. We didn’t get any further than opening the basket lid.

The sharp nudge of Daisy Carmichael’s elbow drew my attention from the basket to her. My friend’s heated stare drew my attention to the men shedding their shirts. We sat as one on the blanket, stretched out our legs, and watched on in silence, the picnic forgotten.

From a distance, we couldn’t hear everything they said as they chatted while they worked, although I was quite sure I caught Alex’s booming voice say the words “she” and “nurse”. Gabe spoke and Alex’s response was to shake his head and glance at us. Or, rather, at Daisy. Gabe stopped cranking the jack and followed his gaze.

Daisy and I dove into the picnic basket, clunking our foreheads together. By the time we stopped laughing and looked up, Alex was crouched beside the tire, wrench in hand.

Daisy leaned back, propping herself up on her elbows. The wisp of a smile touched her lips as she watched Alex remove the tire. I focused on Gabe lifting the spare from its storage position on the side of the motorcar. He may be a little shorter than his giant friend, but he certainly wasn’t lacking in any way. I couldn’t help but admire the bulge of his biceps, the stretch of his cotton undervest across his broad back.

Once the tires were swapped and secured, the men returned the toolbox to the motorcar and wiped their hands on rags. They put on their shirts before sauntering over to us.

With twin sighs of disappointment that the show was over, Daisy and I made ourselves look busy by emptying the contents of the picnic basket, but I bungled my attempt to appear composed by dropping one of the sandwiches. The carefully wrapped package came undone and slices of boiled egg and lettuce spilled onto the blanket.

“I’ll eat that one,” I said, laughing off my fumble. I glanced up to see Gabe smiling at me. It was very similar to the one Daisy had sported as she watched the men.

I redoubled my efforts to look busy with the picnic.

Alex peered into the basket and smacked his lips. “God bless Mrs. Ling.”

Gabe’s cook was indeed a marvel. Aside from four different types of sandwiches, she’d packed rabbit pies, a potato salad, sliced ham, chicken, scotched eggs, and mince pies. There were also pastries and fruit, with bottled beer to wash it all down. It was more of a survival kit than a picnic lunch.

“Mrs. Ling knows how much you eat.” Daisy handed him a sandwich only to draw it back suddenly. “Are your hands clean?”

He inspected his hands. “As clean as can be under the circumstances.”

Gabe sat with his back against the tree trunk. “Thank goodness for fine weather.”

“I’ll say,” Daisy murmured.

Alex frowned at her, the sandwich halfway to his mouth.

“I wouldn’t want to be changing a tire in the rain,” Gabe went on.

“Or eating a picnic,” I added.

“Nooo,” Daisy said. “But it would have added an extra something.”

“Yes, it would have,” Alex said, matter-of-factly. “We would have got wet.”

Daisy smiled at him around her mouthful, which only confused him more. He sensed she was teasing him, but he wasn’t sure how.

Gabe must have been more aware of being watched while changing the tire than his friend. He pretended to inspect his sandwich, giving it far more attention than ham and buttered bread deserved. I had the sinking feeling he was drawing out the moment to tease us. “You seemed to be watching closely.”

Daisy was quicker and more composed than me. While I tried to think of something clever to deflect from my embarrassment, she blurted out an excuse that seemed quite plausible, and did it with all the breezy charm of a young woman without a care in the world.

“I was watching closely because it might come in useful one day.”

Gabe chuckled and ate his sandwich, but Alex gave her his full attention.

“You want to know how to change a flat tire on a motorcar that you don’t even own yet?” he asked.

“Thank you for assuming I will one day own a motor. But no, it’s for research. I’m going to be an author of novels.”

Alex shook his head as if trying to loosen a thought. “Setting aside the fact you were going to be an actress last month and an artist before that, what does changing a tire have to do with writing novels?”

“I may need to describe how to do it if my character is presented with the problem of a flat.”

He grunted. “You’ll only succeed in boring your readers.”

“You have no idea what goes into writing a novel.”

“And you do?”

She sniffed. “Yes. I’ve written a chapter already.”

“May I read it?”

“Certainly not. No one can read it until it’s finished.”

“Is it an adventure novel? I used to like adventure novels, but I haven’t finished a book since before the war. I used to read a lot but can’t seem to concentrate anymore.”

“There’ll be some adventure in it. That’s why I came on this visit. I want to experience new things so my stories can have a more realistic flavor. I’ve never been to Ipswich before, let alone met a silver magician.”

“We may not meet one this time,” I told her. “From the information we’ve been able to find so far, it seems the Folgates were the last of their kind and they’ve possibly died out. With my brother gone…” My throat suddenly closed and my eyes filled with unshed tears. I hadn’t thought about James for some time, and for that I felt guilty. He deserved at least a passing thought every day from his sister.

Gabe placed his hand over mine on the blanket. “Are you all right?”

I nodded. “With James gone, the survival of silver magic rests on the shoulders of the mysterious Marianne Folgate, and whether or not she had children.”

“You’re convinced your brother was a silver magician, related to Marianne in some way?” Alex asked.

“I am. James was convinced, and I now know that a magician is aware of their talent, deep within.”

“But not you?”

“I have no affinity for silver, just paper.”

Daisy had been frowning, and she now finally spoke what was on her mind. “But if your brother was a silver magician, then the line continues through you. You and James are from the same bloodline.”

I plucked at a loose thread on the blanket. “I’m not sure…”

“You don’t think he was your brother?”

I shrugged. “I don’t know anything anymore. What if he wasn’t? My mother was so secretive about our father, our past…I honestly wouldn’t be surprised at this point to find out that James and I are adopted.”

“You said he looked like her,” Daisy pointed out.

“There is that. But, although I have gray eyes like her and am similar in height, there’s really nothing else we have in common. I’m blonder, my face is narrower, and our characters are different.” Perhaps James was her only natural child. Perhaps I was the adopted one.

Gabe remained silent, listening intently. He’d heard this argument from me before. We’d discussed it when I learned I was a paper magician and ruled out the possibility of silver magic.

Since that discovery, I’d met a paper magician family who operated a manufacturing business in London. Brother and sister, Mr. and Miss Peterson, had been welcoming. They’d kindly offered to answer any questions I had about my newly discovered ability. As far as we knew, I wasn’t related to them, but it was possible our lineages merged further up the family tree than records showed. With access to his parents’ catalog of magicians, Gabe had also given me a list of known paper magicians outside of London, in case I wanted to write to them. But I’d set the task aside for another time. I wasn’t ready to expand my horizons. Yet.

For now, we wanted to investigate the Folgates, the last known family of silver magicians in the country. Whereas paper magicians were relatively common, silver ones were rare. If both magics were in my lineage, it seemed an easier task to begin with the Folgates to hopefully add more branches to my rather sparse family tree.

Gabe offered me a bowl of strawberries. “Hopefully we’ll have a clearer picture after today.”

We exchanged smiles as I plucked a strawberry from the bowl.

Daisy topped up her cup with more beer. “And if we discover nothing, at least we would have had an adventure to Ipswich. I’ve never been anywhere except Marlborough and London.”

Alex held out his cup for her to refill. “Adventures are overrated. Believe me, home is the best place in the world.”

“You mean London?”

“I mean wherever home may be for each of us.”

Daisy opened her mouth to say something, but shut it again and poured beer into his cup. It was impossible to argue with a man whose sense of adventure had been shaped and shadowed by war.

I watched Gabe through my lowered lashes to see if he agreed with his friend. Oddly, he suddenly broke into a grin.

He raised his cup to Alex. “You and I shall just have to be content with experiencing further adventures via Daisy’s novels.”

Alex touched his cup to Gabe’s. “That’s good enough for me.”

Daisy pulled a face. “That’s a lot of pressure. I’m not sure my writing talents are up to it.”

“Since when has that stopped you doing something?”

In my mind, Alex was complimenting her, saying she possessed a carefree spirit unencumbered by doubt, but Daisy stiffened. Her lips thinned.

“So I’m a talentless hack, am I?”

Alex’s jaw dropped before firming again. “You’re putting words into my mouth.”

Daisy tipped out the contents of her cup and shoved it into the bag Mrs. Ling had provided for the rubbish. “Am I?” She stood and strode off to the motorcar with a toss of her scarf-covered head.

Alex collected the rest of the leftovers and rubbish and placed them in the bag. “Seems my mind has been made up for me.” He slammed the basket lid down and hefted it as he stood. He stormed off in the direction of Daisy, who had her back to us as she put on her driving coat.

“What does he mean?” I asked Gabe as we watched them ignore one another. “Made his mind up about what?”

“I can’t say, sorry.”

“Does it have something to do with a nurse?”

He glanced sharply at me. “You heard that?”

“Who is she?”

“I can’t break a confidence.”

“Very well, but in the absence of more information, I’ll simply have to go with my first thought—that Alex has been considering whether to pursue a pretty nurse who has perhaps shown an interest in him, or whether to explore his feelings for Daisy further.”

Gabe gave no reaction. None at all. Based on that, it was safe to say my assumption was correct.

“And Daisy just made the choice an easy one for him.” I sighed. “She’s her own worst enemy.”

He picked up the blanket and shook it out. I took the opposite corners and we folded it. Our fingers brushed as we came together, a small current of heat passing between us. I let go and quickly stepped back. As much as I desired him, I didn’t want to explore my feelings. Not yet. Not when he was still raw from ending his engagement to Ivy Hobson, and not when he’d admitted he wasn’t ready for another relationship.

And not when he could have no interest in me beyond friendship.

I cleared my throat. “Please tell Alex that Daisy is sensitive about her lack of formal education and skills. I know she seems confident, but she’s really not. Particularly where he’s concerned.”

“I’ll pass it on. Don’t worry about them. They’ll sort themselves out when they’re both ready.”

He wasn’t the only one who wasn’t ready for commitment, it seemed. It was understandable that Alex was also unsure of himself now, and the future he wanted, or thought he did. Where life had taken on a rhythm of certainty before the war, a new world had risen from its ashes; a world full of restlessness and doubt.

But it held possibility, too, and a sense that life was for living, not merely for existing. The combination was somewhat chaotic and confusing, but I felt as though the chaos and confusion would clear soon and we’d be left with something fresh. I suspected the new decade would bring about changes that none of us could yet fathom.

We traveled the rest of the way to Ipswich without speaking. Daisy was moping, Alex was ignoring her, and it was difficult to have a conversation over the wind and noise of the engine anyway. As we drove into the town center, Gabe slowed the vehicle while Alex used a map to guide him to the address we’d been given for the Folgates.

If Ipswich were a novel, it would be brimming with tales of adventure, romance and intrigue as befitting an ancient settlement that had both thrived and suffered at different points in its history. Smoke from the factories and iron foundries smothered the town, and a steady stream of lorries clogged the streets near the port. The municipal buildings stood proud and sturdy, as magnificent as anything found in London. There was no evidence of the two zeppelin raids that had damaged the town during the war. Although I’d read about the bombings in the newspaper at the time, censorship had forbidden them from reporting the locations. Until recently, only locals had known.

From the archivist at Ipswich’s Silversmiths Guild we’d learned the address of John Folgate, father of Marianne. The archivist had done considerable research into the family over the years and traced the line back to the time of the Medicis in Florence. It had been a Medici who’d kidnapped a member of the silversmith family who worked for the powerful Ottomans, and then centuries later, a descendant had moved to England and changed their name to Folgate. The archivist couldn’t find anything more about Marianne after she left Ipswich. Thanks to Gabe’s parents, we knew she and a man named Cooper had briefly lived in a house in Wimbledon that was owned by Lord Coyle. We couldn’t definitely say whether they’d married, as there was no record of their union, but that didn’t mean they hadn’t married somewhere else.

A jeweler now occupied the address the archivist gave us for John Folgate. The quaint shop amidst a row of shops with matching bow windows reminded me of those flanking the entrance to Crooked Lane where the Glass Library was located. The jeweler knew nothing of John Folgate and directed us to his neighbor, a tailor by the name of Mr. Dowd who’d occupied the same shop for almost forty years.

Mr. Dowd frowned when Gabe asked if he knew the Folgates, but he finally admitted that he did. “I knew them well.” He clasped the measuring tape draped around his neck in both hands, capturing his jacket lapels, too. He squinted at each of us in turn through thick spectacles, looking somewhat overwhelmed with so many people in his small shop.

“Them?” Gabe prompted.

“John, Juliette and Marianne, their daughter. Why do you want to know about the Folgates?”

“You knew Marianne personally?” I asked. “What can you tell us about her? What did she look like?”

My eagerness startled him a little, but he soon recovered. He didn’t immediately answer me, however. “Who are you? Why are you asking about the Folgates?”

Although Gabe had already introduced us, he did so again, this time explaining that I might be a relative of the Folgates, but was trying to find out for certain. Mr. Dowd leaned forward to study me closely.

“You could be related, yes. There are some resemblances.”

My heart leapt into my throat. I tried to keep a lid on my excitement so as not to startle him again. “What resemblances?”

“You’re the same height and build as Marianne, and there’s something about your eyes that seems familiar.” He adjusted his spectacles. “But that’s all. It may mean nothing.” He frowned and tapped a finger against his lips in thought, but didn’t go on.

“What can you tell us about her? What was she like? How old was she when she left? Where did she go?” So much for keeping a lid on.

The fingers clutching the tape and lapels tightened. “Slow down, Miss. One question at a time. Marianne was just a girl of about seven or eight when I first met her. She was quiet, and rarely spoke to me. She was only eighteen when she left Ipswich. Very young. Too young for a girl to be out on her own.” He clicked his tongue, disapproving. “I know things are different nowadays, since the war, but back then, girls didn’t leave home until they married. But Marianne couldn’t wait to leave. Then her parents died shortly after in an accident.”

“After?” Gabe asked. “Not before she left?”

“Definitely after. Mere weeks, I think it was.”

That was at odds with what we knew about the silverware Marianne had sold in London. The pieces were engraved with her father’s initials and, according to the buyers, she’d inherited them. It was possible she’d come back to Ipswich after their deaths to claim her inheritance, but when Gabe posed that question to Mr. Dowd, he shook his head.

“She never came back. I wondered if she’d died. John and Juliette’s possessions went into storage after their deaths to wait for Marianne to reappear, but as far as I know, nothing was ever claimed. I’m not sure if they’ve since been distributed to charities. If you are related to Marianne, perhaps you have an inheritance awaiting you, young lady.” He let go of the tape to poke a finger into the air. “I’ve just thought of something that might help. Wait here. Mind the shop. If anyone comes, I’ll only be five minutes.”

He shuffled off to the back and disappeared into an adjoining room, leaving the door open. He headed up a staircase, his steps slow but steady.

We filled our time by inspecting the fine suits on display and the one being cut to size on the counter. Alex was placing different ties to his chest and admiring the effect in the mirror, although I caught him glancing at Daisy from time to time in the reflection. She sat in a leather armchair and watched the passing traffic through the window.

Mr. Dowd returned with a photo album, already opened to a page in the middle. He placed it on the counter and turned it to show us. He stabbed a finger on a photograph depicting one man and two women standing in front of the shop next door. The painted sign on the window simply read Ipswich Silversmith.

Mr. Dowd pointed to the younger of the two women in the photograph. “That’s her. That’s Marianne.”

I didn’t need him to tell me. I knew instantly it was Marianne because I recognized her. She was younger than I remembered, but it was definitely her.

My mother.