15

Twelve days to go

It was time to get some more skin in the game. Mrs. King had gone over the calculations with Winnie. They needed enough hands to manage the pulleys, set up the winches, pack and wheel the crates, dismantle the runners and the slides, lift the heaviest articles of furniture, and more. Mrs. King went to Mrs. Bone’s villa on the docks to start hiring men. The wraith-like porter eyed her with suspicion from the second she arrived.

“Mrs. King?”

She glanced up and saw the Janes peeping around the door to the inventions room. The girls were in starched collars, fierce frills on their aprons.

“They’re here,” said Jane-one.

There was a vast warehouse on one side of the yard. Jane-one dragged the door back on its runners. Jane-two handed Mrs. King a piece of paper. “Names,” she said. “Burn it after, please.”

Casting feeble light, the electric lamps sputtered as she entered the vast space. The whole warehouse smelled of sulfur. The cobblestones had been swept, scrubbed, rinsed, and swept again, and half a dozen men stood waiting underneath a gigantic set of metal beams.

“Where are the others?” she murmured to the Janes.

“Mrs. Bone says to buy the foremen,” Jane-two replied. “They’ll recruit the rest. Go on.”

Mrs. King kicked herself: she should have known that. She approached at an easy pace, felt the men examining her. One of them looked ancient: sun beaten and resplendently wrinkled. The others were enormous, brutal-looking men—built like shire horses, and lavishly perfumed.

“Let me talk about the fees,” she said, not wanting to beat about the bush.

They frowned. Their eyes flicked sideways, seeking consensus. The old man shook his head. “We know the fees.”

They took a step forward, then another. Tiny, fractional movements, so small you almost didn’t notice them.

“Risks, then?” she said.

The old man shook his head again. “We’ve looked at those, too.” He smiled, showing an enormous set of teeth. False, she guessed, and bought at tremendous expense. His breath was meaty and dry.

Mrs. King smiled back. “Then shall we discuss your credentials?”

They shifted a little at that, scratched themselves.

“Clever girl,” said the old man, nodding. “Aren’t you?”

Mrs. King sighed. “Aren’t we all?”

The old man’s eyes sparkled. They were small and depthless. “You should make more of yourself, dear,” he said. Reached out. Ran a finger down the seam of her blouse. “If you want to make your mark.”

Mrs. King didn’t flinch. “I don’t need to make my mark,” she said.

The man retracted his finger. “Do you not?” he said. “’Cause here we are, dragged down here to pay our respects and show our credentials, when we ain’t never negotiated with you in our lives before.” He tilted his head. “Where’s Mrs. Bone?”

Mrs. King spread her hands. “Mrs. Bone is otherwise engaged.”

“No, I won’t allow that. My boys run Leman Street to Tower Hill. Joey here takes anything north of the Crown and Shuttle. Walter Adlerian’s tucked up nicely in Limehouse. And so we talk to one another. We compare notes, dear. And what do we hear? Nothing but talk, dawn till dusk, of a nice young lady pottering around Mrs. Bone’s estate. A mere wisp of a thing, no meat on her, hardly any references—entirely in charge.”

Mrs. King laughed at that. She liked a negotiation. It made her nerves go away. “I have references.”

His smile widened, showing the outer edges of his dentures. “For side jobs. Skimming. Shifting ostrich feathers and cans of potted meat. Nothing wrong with that. Everybody has their level. Rich man in his castle, poor man at his gate—nice and tidy.” He studied her again. “But you coming along gets us all to wondering.”

“Wondering what?”

“Whether there’s a storm coming.”

Mrs. King considered this. “Check a barometer,” she said.

He bowed his head a little. “I do, dear. I check it every morning. I don’t like getting caught in the rain. I don’t care for nasty surprises. None of us do.”

He raised a finger.

“We can do what you need. We can do it with our eyes closed. Our boys are top notch—you know that. So don’t ask me about my credentials.” The teeth glinted at her. “But let me give you a warning. We keep our eyes on Mrs. Bone’s enemies, same as you do. We know Mr. Murphy. A proud man. A good family. Loyal. Very careful. He doesn’t move if there’s a risk. And they’re moving on Ruth Bone. I can smell it.”

Mrs. King said nothing.

“Our men are loyal, too. Been loyal to Mrs. Bone for twenty years. But we follow the wages. If there’s any risk to Mrs. Bone, we’ve got to consider our options.”

Mrs. King understood the sentiment entirely. “There’s no risk to Mrs. Bone,” she said, at last. “She’ll be here forever.”

“That’s as may be. But someone new might be putting big ideas in her head. Over-extending her. Spending on her credit.” He frowned. “It’s a finely balanced thing, this web. Delicate. We don’t need no other spiders coming along, messing it up.”

“I’m not a spider,” said Mrs. King coolly.

“Then you’re a fly,” said the old man. His eyes scurried all over her. “And that makes you somebody’s lunch.”


“Hired,” she said to the Janes when she was safely indoors.

“Were you satisfied?” said Jane-two.

“Have I got a choice?”

The Janes considered this.

Mrs. King sighed. “Never mind.”

They brought her tea and cake on the dessert trolley, wheeling it in at top speed. The teapot rattled alarmingly.

“Sugar, Mrs. King?”

“Two,” she said. She wanted something sweet, something comforting. It surprised her. Perhaps she was feeling the tiniest bit lonely, kicking her heels out on the docks.

I can live anywhere I like when this is done, she mused. But where would that be? She didn’t allow herself to think too far ahead. It led to complacency. She had no tolerance for that.

Jane-one dragged a pair of ropes across the floorboards. They hissed as they came. “This is our swing,” she said. Mrs. King studied it. Four ropes, four handlebars, two wooden bars. They looked fearfully delicate. “You need a good, solid hook when you’re doing trapeze,” said Jane-one. “Will we have one?”

Mrs. King thought about it. “We can get the chandelier out of the way for you. Use the hook on the dome in the hall.”

“What sort of dome?”

“Glass.”

“Reinforced with?”

“Steel, I suppose.”

“Very well.” The Janes nodded.

Mrs. King felt, not for the first time, that they were schooling her in this job, not the other way around. “Good. Alice can make sure you get a look at it.”

A spark of something crossed Jane-one’s face. Jane-two closed her eyes.

“What?” said Mrs. King.

“Nothing,” said Jane-one.

They folded their arms, inscrutable.

Mrs. King laughed. “Don’t tell me you’ve formed an enmity against my sister.”

“She strikes us as a changeable sort of person,” said Jane-two.

“Moony,” said Jane-one. “A milksop.”

“That’s hardly fair,” said Mrs. King. “You’ve only met the girl once.”

“We have eyes,” said Jane-one. “We have our instincts.”

“We’re using our voices,” added Jane-two, witheringly, “as instructed, to indicate a risk.”

“No use putting a canary in the coal mine when it doesn’t have a nose for gas,” said Jane-one. “Alice Parker’s got eyeballs as big as saucers. You could run rings all around her, easy as pie. I know the sort.”

“Nonsense,” said Mrs. King, laughing again. “Alice has a good head on her shoulders. Trust me.” She steered the Janes out of the room. “Back to work.”


But later she pondered it. She remembered carrying her sister in her arms as an infant. Alice used to turn so red, cry so much.

Mrs. Bone had been the first one to clock it, years before. “Is Baby running a fever?” she said once.

“Don’t think so.”

“Then what’s she working herself up about?”

Alice had been beating the air with her little fists, pulsing with energy, lolling and struggling. It went on forever. When she finished, she looked gray and wan and spent.

“Like a weather vane,” said Mrs. Bone. “Doesn’t know which way she’s blowing.”

Mrs. King had hated looking after Alice. It made her long to climb the drainpipe, scale the roof, run and hide. It had felt wicked and marvelous when she didn’t have to do it anymore, when she left Alice and Mother and Mr. Parker behind, and entered Park Lane.

She recalled the day she left home so well. Mother was in her chair by the mantelpiece. There was a fierce buzzing coming from the corner of the room, a wasp trapped in spider threads, trying to escape. The dust on the hearth had congealed, growing sticky. Mother’s expression was worse than usual, frayed around the edges. A man with a shiny coat and silvery hair was sitting in Mr. Parker’s chair. He had his hand pressed on Mother’s wrist. It wasn’t a friendly gesture.

“You should find yourself under no anxiety,” he said.

Mrs. King had been standing in the doorway. She raised her voice. “What are you saying to her?” she asked. She felt afraid, but she put it in a box.

The silver-haired man turned. She remembered the look. Long, frank, disinterested. “Many things, young lady,” he said. “And not for your ears.”

“Dinah...” Mother said.

It wasn’t an instruction, or even a plea—but Mrs. King came in, arms steady, and lifted Alice from Mother’s lap. She averted her eyes. She didn’t want to see the vacant parts of Mother’s expression.

“Your daughter will find herself in an excellent position,” said the gentleman. “A privileged position. She will earn a very comfortable wage. She might be able to send something home.”

Mother faced the grimy window, and she took the daylight with her, sucked it into her skin. “I don’t know,” she said.

Mrs. King remembered the feeling in her gut, an understanding that she was being discussed. That something was being arranged on her behalf.

“Splendid, Mrs. Parker,” said the gentleman. He released her wrist, and examined his nails. “We’ll send a man to fetch young Dinah tonight.”

Mrs. King remembered shifting Alice in her arms. “Why?” she asked.

Nowadays she’d demand an answer. By any means necessary. It would be inconceivable not to get it. But back then, when she was only a girl, it wasn’t inconceivable.

The gentleman looked at her again. “Hold your tongue,” he told her.

Mother didn’t admonish him. She didn’t seem to hear him at all. Alice grizzled, as if she couldn’t decide whether to start crying or not.


Changeable, Jane-two had said. Mrs. King didn’t like that word, in relation to Alice. Of course there would come a moment when Miss de Vries would try to befriend her. Mrs. King had seen it happen to girls before: the lazy, sideways nature of it. Almost like an alligator yawning, catching flies in its mouth. Madam liked to make alliances below stairs, circumventing the natural order of things: bypassing the butler, housekeeper, the senior servants, anyone with their wits about them. There was no particular harm to it. She just liked to have one humble little person up her sleeve. No doubt it made her feel a little bigger than she was.

Alice might fall for it, she thought.

She closed that thought away. Not likely. Alice possessed Mrs. King’s own blood. Of course there were girls who would have weakened themselves for Miss de Vries. Indulged all sorts of fantasies—mooning over her, adhering to her, wishing to possess all that she possessed. But Alice wasn’t a fool. She knew which side her bread was buttered. She wanted her fee.

She’d said so, only the day before, when Mrs. King went to get her report.

“Look here. I don’t suppose I could get some of my payment up front, could I?” Alice had asked.

This annoyed Mrs. King. First Mrs. Bone, now the rest of them. “Certainly not,” she said. “I can’t show special favors to you—I told you before.”

Alice looked uneasy. “I was only asking,” she said.

Mrs. King softened her tone. “Why?” she said. “Is something the matter?”

She watched Alice’s expression harden. Mrs. King recognized that demeanor. It was her own.

“Not in the least,” her sister said quietly. “And I’ve nothing to report.”