Chapter Twenty-Nine

 

 

 

“You know,” Asher mused, heaving another hay bale into the barn, “you don’t have to hold me down every time.”

Halloran slanted a sharp glance in his direction. Its ferocity was easily deciphered. They were out in the open, in broad daylight, and two of the other ranch hands were quick on Asher’s heels with more hay from the cart.

Charlie and Blackjack had left the ranch in the early hours, when it didn’t seem as if an attack was forthcoming, and returned from Crossroads Grange with a cartful of feed for the cattle. The trip had been uneventful but Charlie was reaping its rewards over a drawn-out breakfast while Asher and the other humans were put to work.

Asher didn’t mind. The crisp morning air was slightly damp, his breaths forming steam clouds with every exhale. Halloran had taken over the watch from Maud. His company was almost enjoyable when he wasn’t glaring quite so hard.

“You’ll do what you want,” Asher acknowledged, vying for nonchalance, “but I’m just saying. You don’t have to.”

“Why? ’Cause you’ll be a good whore for me?”

Boots crunched over the straw-covered floor of the barn, announcing the other hands. Asher’s riposte tangled in his throat.

“Get back to work,” Halloran advised, no less mordant for speaking quietly.

Asher shammed a salute. “Yes, sir.” A lack of respect could cost him dearly, but fear of repercussions had recently been subsumed by other, far more pointless sentiments.

It was necessary to remember that pointless was all they were.

He stomped outside to join the others, another cog in the machine that Willowbranch was shaping into at Halloran’s behest. Another few months and, once winter was done with them, there’d be no point in rebuilding New Morning Farm. Sargasso could raise its animals here, slaughter them at Crossroads Grange and keep all the profits safe in the mayor’s house at the heart of town.

Nothing had changed. The ache inside him had deceived Asher into thinking otherwise last night, but as morning bled into a frosty afternoon, he remembered his place.

“Was thinking we ought to see about that pump out back,” Charlie said, once he’d joined Asher on the porch with a cup of coffee. “In case the other one freezes by midwinter.”

“Think it will?”

Charlie nodded. “Oh, yeah. Always had problems gettin’ our water at New Mornin’. And if there ain’t no snow…”

There would be nothing to melt to water the cattle. Asher nodded. “All right, I’ll help—”

“No, you won’t.” Halloran could move as soundlessly as a cat in the night. He never failed to make use of that talent when Asher least expected him to.

Incensed, Asher glanced over his shoulder. The demon in the doorway was easy to pick out. A cigar’s smoldering end illuminated his eyes.

“You wanna do it instead?”

“No.”

“Then I will.” Asshole.

“You won’t,” Halloran reiterated, exuding calm, “’cause you won’t be here.” It might have sounded like a threat, if Halloran hadn’t wasted a liberal amount of those on Asher in the past.

By now Asher knew the difference between idle talk and real peril. He knew this wasn’t the latter.

“Why? Sick of me reeking of cow dung?”

Gaping at his churlish answer, Charlie glanced away hastily when Halloran knotted a hand in Asher’s hair. The grip was firm enough to yank his head back. It stopped just short of making his scalp sting.

If Asher hadn’t fought the tug, it would’ve hurt even less. “Ow! What’s the—”

“Watch that mouth,” Halloran growled. “Or Malachi may just cut it out.”

Malachi? It was enough to quell Asher’s resistance. He glared up at Halloran, bemusement morphing into the most absurd surge of hurt. “Done with me just like that, huh?”

“Apparently you’ve got some skill with watch-fixin’. I ain’t got no need of that. Malachi, on the other hand…”

Border towns did this a lot. The trade of workers and bloodbags ensured the gene pool never became stagnant. Without it, Asher’s parents might never have met. He wondered idly if that wouldn’t have been preferable.

“For how long?”

Halloran released him with would’ve been a light shove for a vampire. For Asher, it was violent enough to sting his pride. “That’s no concern of yours.”

In other words, Halloran didn’t know. Malachi had requested Asher and, like a bottle of milk or a roll of clean laundry, Asher had to be delivered to his doorstep. What went on between him and Halloran in the night didn’t matter. Malachi called the shots. Halloran obeyed.

“Ain’t that just swell, then? Fine, I’ll go wash up,” Asher forced out through clenched teeth. He only briefly met Halloran’s eyes on his way into the house. He didn’t know what he expected to find in that unnerving, dark gaze, but it wasn’t wariness.

Then again, Halloran knew better than anyone else what Asher was capable of. Perhaps he was right to fear.

 

* * * *

 

A dull, buttery glow lengthened their shadows over the shop floor. The gas lamps strained to provide adequate illumination, but the night was thick and starless, and it took Asher a moment to adjust to the gloom.

Peeking from beneath a black lace hem, limbs twitched and trembled on the desk. The trays of instruments and magnifying glasses had been pushed to one quarter of the table to make room for the body.

A woman’s black shoe hanging precariously from slender toes clattered to the ground.

“I found it like this,” Malachi explained. “The second in as many days.” He sounded put-off by the tally.

Asher swallowed hard. “I see.” Halloran’s dismissal had made mention of fixing things for Malachi. He just hadn’t said that Asher was being summoned for the purpose of fixing people.

The maid lying prone on Uncle Howard’s worktable twitched an eye in his direction. The other was gone, exposing the hollow metal socket behind it. Thin membranes stretched over the copper and brass, more organic than Asher would’ve expected.

His insides twisted at the sight. He was suddenly glad that he’d left Willowbranch without his supper.

“Well?” Malachi snapped, impatient. “Can you fix it or not?”

“I don’t know.” The eye alone would require delving into Uncle Howard’s notes in hopes of some instruction. Deciphering his spidery script could take hours. But the maid’s troubles didn’t end there. A fire stoker had been thrust through her rib cage, the tip sticking out through the fabric of her uniform, under the left arm.

Even if Asher somehow figured out a way to make her function without the eye, he couldn’t begin to judge what there was to be done about the steel impaling her. “Did you ask Matheson? He’s a doctor—”

“He’s more preoccupied with my sister.”

Asher bit down on the urge to point out that Angelita wasn’t sick. Or, at least, not sick the way she had been. But what if Malachi already knew? Making others jump hoops for his amusement seemed like the sort of lesson Ambrose would’ve taught all of his progeny.

“I can… I can take a look.” He’d make no promises, but the maid was still watching him, her expression as blank as canvas.

Malachi clamped a hand on his shoulder. “Excellent. I knew your uncle taught you a thing or two. Father will be pleased. If you need me, I’ll be at the house. Send word with my man,” he added, gesturing vaguely toward the door.

The stern-faced creature who had followed them from town hall wasn’t there for Malachi’s protection, then, but to keep an eye on Asher.

The snare was closing around him once more.

“Malachi.”

Long, raven-dark hair fluttering over one shoulder, Malachi turned at the summons.

Why do you care what happens to a house maid? Where is the other one? The likelihood of a straight answer to either question was slim. “Did you do this?” Asher asked instead.

As if wounded by the accusation, Malachi pressed a hand to his chest. “Perish the thought. I don’t bother with half lives.” His expression turned feral as he dragged his gaze down Asher’s body. “Not often, anyway.”

“You know Nyle is gone.”

“Some rumor to that effect reached my ears,” Malachi confirmed, cocking his head. “Is that relevant to doing what I asked?”

“No,” Asher was forced to admit. Not relevant, not practical. Not anything that would get a rise out of Malachi if indeed he’d been pulling Nyle’s strings.

“Then I suggest you get to work.”

The door remained open in Malachi’s wake, as though he wanted Asher to be aware of the sentinel parked outside. He needn’t have tried so hard. Proof of his captivity was laid up on the table, gazing up at him with a hollow stare.

She had a comely face. Not as breathtaking as the likes of Angelita, certainly, but not unhandsome. Her small mouth and upturned nose gave her a vaguely mousy appearance.

“Hello,” Asher said, more tentative than he’d been about any piece of machinery. He remembered this one from his first time at Ambrose’s. She’d offered him a drink just before the master of the house arrived to greet his guests. And, later, she had brought supper to his room. Asher had barely exchanged a few words with her. He wasn’t sure it was allowed.

There was no one to stop him now.

“Do you have a name?”

“D-D-Dorcas.” The tinny whirr that accompanied the answer suggested that more than her eye had been spliced with metal.

“I’m Asher. Do you remember me at all?”

The maid’s features remained still, no reaction in her warm brown eye.

“Can you tell me who did this to you?” It shouldn’t have mattered. Ambrose’s house teemed with monsters.

Dorcas went on staring at him as if the question hadn’t registered. Those metal plates welded into her skull must’ve run deeper than just the eye socket.

Asher shoved fury and horror aside, and tried again. “Does it hurt?”

A minute headshake this time. She wasn’t all machine, then. She was more like Asher than the time pieces he was used to operating on.

He spared a glance to the door. Malachi’s thug was still out there, but fidgeting. Human. Asher leaned a hand to the desk and dropped his voice. “What’s the last thing you remember, before you were hurt?”

It was a stab in the dark, but he reasoned that knowing how the maid had come to be like this would give him a basis for how to help her. He refused to think of it as fixing a broken device.

“Eight-f-fifteen to nine o’clock, I dust. I c-clean. I fold. Nine—nine o’clock. Bring b-breakfast tray. Tea, not coffee. Twenty—” Dorcas cut herself off, head snapping to the right. “One, two, three, four—four steps. Unlock the door, unlock, unlock—”

“Okay, okay. Shh,” Asher said, worried that the rising fervor of her attempts to answer would draw unwelcome attention.

He didn’t need to hear the rest to guess where it was going.

“Is the rest of you like your eye…or is it, uh, flesh?”

Either unaware or unwilling to say, Dorcas remained silent.

Asher sighed. His hands shook. “I have to unbutton your dress and see, all right? I’m so sorry. I wish there was another way.” Malachi had left him none but for the clear instruction that Asher was to mend this—somehow. Knowing him, it was a test of some sort.

It was just as well that he’d cleared out quickly. Had he stuck around, Asher might have dug out his cache of silver bullets and squeezed a few into Malachi’s skull. He hated him in this moment. He hated Halloran and all the rest of them, for allowing Sargasso to become a place where this happened.

He hated himself for not knowing what to do.

The thin white camisole Dorcas wore beneath her uniform was soaked with a viscous black substance. Asher grimaced, praying for it to be oil rather than blood. He touched the protruding end of the stoker with a fingertip. Her body remained as still as a corpse but a muscle twitched in her neck at the tentative graze.

The unfortunate comparison stuck in Asher’s mind. He recognized the melding of steel and flesh below her collarbones. He looked the same under his clothes.

“Do you feel any pain?”

Dorcas treated him to another of her weighty silences.

Whatever she was now, she’d been someone’s daughter in another life. Maybe she’d had friends who cared about her, or a sweetheart. A life beyond the invisible collar around her neck.

Asher blinked back the sting in his eyes. “I’ll try to be quick,” he said, and seized the long, tapered end of the stoker with one hand.

The slick, fleshy sound turned his stomach. He didn’t let himself glance away from the gushing wound. He owed her that much.