Witch in the White City: A Dark Historical Fantasy/Mystery (Neva Freeman Book 1) Nick Wisseman (best management books of all time txt) đ
- Author: Nick Wisseman
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Most of the hangers-on looked appropriately chagrined. But that didnât stop a policeman near the back from asking, âWhatâs he saying in there?â
âNone of your damn business,â the wiry guard responded curtly. âExcept for this.â He turned to a third man. âCarter, get this lot in order and take themâevery last oneâto the Lagoon. Youâre to drag it for a body. Discreetly.â The ensuing gasps and whistles earned another glare from the wiry guard. âStow your jabber,â he snapped.
âMan or woman?â asked Carter.
âWoman, young and blonde. Take everyone; this isnât a damn exhibit.â Disdainfully, the wiry guard glanced around the hall again until his eyes lighted on Neva.
She flinched inwardly, bracing herself to be called out as an impostor.
But her disguise held. âEveryone except Johnson,â the wiry guard said. âHe stays on the door.â
âThe Negro?â someone asked, none too quietly.
The wiry guard fixed the speaker with a withering glare. âYes, the Negro: he takes direction and knows his place. Unlike the rest of you.â He turned back to Carter. âThe Lagoonâdiscreetly.â
âYes, sir.â Without further hesitation, Carter chivvied the other men away from the door. Several of them jostled Neva as they passed, but she didnât respondâshe couldnât bend her voice like Augie, and pushing back would have been the worst of stupidities. Arthur always carried himself with stoic calm anyway; she wasnât acting out of character by taking the high road.
Once they were alone, the wiry guard wagged his finger at her. âMind that no one comes in without my leave. And knock first before you ask for it.â
Neva nodded.
He grunted and reopened the doorâwider this time, enough that she caught a glimpse inside. Copelandâs back was to her, mostly obscuring the rest of the room. But she could see bars to either side. And just before the wiry guard shut the door, Neva heard a creak of wood and saw Mr. DeBellâs face appear below Copelandâs elbow, as if her fatherâyes, her fatherâhad slumped in his seat.
âI told you,â his voice drifted out to her, âI donât remember.â
The thud of the door closing muffled Copelandâs reply. But when Neva pressed against the door (facing out, to maintain appearances), she found she could hear most of what was said.
âNo,â Mr. DeBell replied to what must have been a question from Copeland. âI donât recall anything about a âlittle manâ in the Levee.â
âBut you remember a girl there? A Kesiah Nelkin?â
âJust glimmers. Not her name, but her face ... Yes, thatâs her.â
âWas her. Sheâs dead now, Edward. You killed her.â
Silence for a moment. Then, âI suppose I did.â
âYou suppose?â
âI told you, I donât remember.â
âNot all of it, but some of it, you said.â
Another pause. âBits and pieces. Enough.â
âTake me through it one more time. From the last thing you recollect clearly until now. You were arguing with yourâwhat did you call him?â
The longest pause yet. âMy son. Please leave him out of this.â
âI believe you called him your bastard.â
Neva went even stiller.
âAugustine was my son,â Mr. DeBell said at last. âNegro or not, he was my son.â
âAnd you were quarreling about his parentage?â
A lengthy sigh. âHeâd found a letter. From James Bailey to Sol Bloom. James had written Sol to ask about Augieâs performance at the Fair and made some throwaway comment about how âthe boyâs fatherâ would be interested to know; James is usually more circumspect. But Augie found the letter on Solâs desk, made the connection, and confronted me with it.â
âYou confessed.â
âIt was past time. But he didnât take it well.â
Neva nearly sighed herselfâso that was why Bat Wiggins had seen Augie and Mr. DeBell arguing at the Stockyards. Yet Augie had never said anything to her, never acted the slightest bit out of sorts. Surely heâd meant to tell her. Had he just been waiting for the right time? She hoped Copeland would pursue this line of inquiry.
He had other ends in mind, though. âWhat then?â he prompted.
âI went home, drafted a letter to my son Derekââ
âYour acknowledged bastard.â
âYes ... It was time he knew the truth as well.â
And what about me? thought Neva.
âBut you werenât willing to tell him directly?â asked Copeland.
Mr. DeBell laughed bitterly. âHow is this relevant? As I said, I found I wasnât strong enough. Not even close. So I sent the letterââ
âBack at the Yards?â
âYes.â
âWhy go back to work to send it? There must be a collection box closer to home.â
âOf course. But I prefer the Yards stationery for anything official.â
âAnd this was official?â
âI wanted it to be.â
âI see.â Copeland sounded like he didnât, but he moved on anyway. âSo after you recopied your confession on the fanciest of stationeries, you went to the Levee too ...â
âShelter from the coming storm, I imagine.â
âTo take solace in a bit of debauchery, you mean.â
â... If weâre being frank.â
âOh, I always aim to be. How did you come across the girl in the drawing?â
âShe was leaning out a window, arguing with another girlâwho had red hair; I remember that. And then ... darkness.â
âAnd blood. You said you remember âbuckets of blood.ââ
A deep, shuddering breath. âYes.â
âAlong with âglimmersâ of the other victims?â
âGlimmers of most of them. But as I said, no recollection of the man you mistook for meââ
âThe man who somehow died in your clothes.â
ââor the little fellow in the Levee.â
Neva willed Copeland to ask Mr. DeBell if heâd been bitten by a swarm of insects, maddened to murderous amnesia by their venom. It would explain everything.
But the Pinkerton continued to have his own agenda. âThe young woman, the one weâre currently dredging the Lagoon forâyou remember her clearly?â
There was a rasping noise now: a dry sob? âPlain as day. My memories have been my own again since yesterday.â
âWhen you wokeâhow did you put itâânaked and disorientedâ outside the Fair?â
âYes.â
âWith no idea how youâd come to lose your clothing or your faculties?â
âNone at all.â
âYet in short order
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