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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More rasping. âPlease. You must believe me: I donât know where these impulses come from. I fought them off last night in the Stock Exhibit, after ...â
After you realized it was me, Neva finished silently. I forgive you; I know what it is to suffer the insectâs venom. Even now, I feel its heat.
âAfter what?â pressed Copeland.
âAfter I comprehended what I was about to do. Except I couldnât bring myself to leave the Fair. And this morning the compulsion was so strong. I tried, but ...â
âBut now weâre dredging the Lagoon.â
âThis isnât me! Lord knows I havenât cherished my wife as I should. But not this. Not ... Not butchery and cannibalism, for Godâs sake!â
It was Copelandâs turn to pause; a shuffle of papers suggested he was looking over his notes. âJust a few more questions. Are you Jack the Ripper?â
This provoked another dark laugh. âNo ... At least, not that I remember.â
âHow are you controlling the insects?â
âWhat insects?â
âThe pests youâve incited to mark your targets. Is it a pheromone? We consulted a naturalist who suggested you might have applied it to your victims in advance.â
âIâm sorry. I would tell you if I knew what you were talking about, but I truly donât.â
Neva chewed her lip. Why wouldnât Mr. DeBell admit heâd been bitten? Did he think no one would believe him?
âI see,â Copeland said again, with the same skepticism. âPerhaps weâll revisit that another time. Are you working alone?â
âGod, I hope so.â
âThe White Chapel Club isnât involved?â
âWhat? No. I havenât seen those fools in a year, and that was just the once.â
âWhat about the porter?â
âWhat porter?â
âThe porter on the Pier. The one who incited a panic by dismembering a crippled Civil War veteranâthe sixth victimâbefore dying rather spectacularly in the Cold Storage fire. You said you remember the veteran; âold fellow,â you termed him. âLamed.â But you didnât kill him. The porter did. There are scores of witnesses. How do you explain that?â
âI ... I remember him, I think. I must have seen him somewhereâmaybe on the Pier with the veteran? But he wasnât a ... partner. I donât remember that.â
âYou donât seem to remember much.â
âWhat else could you need?â
Another shuffling of papers. âLast question: where are your sons now?â
Nothing.
âAnd by sons, I mean your bastards. Where are your bastards?â
Mr. DeBell continued to stall, for which Neva was glad. The more he said about Augie, the more likely it was Copeland would trace him back to the Algerian and Tunisian Village and make the connection to her (if the Pinkerton hadnât done so already). It shouldnât matter ... Unless Copeland could place her at Gaffneyâs Saloon, brawling with that little man whoâd died soon after. Failing that, the Pinkerton would probably bring her in for another round of questioning. It would be uncomfortable but not unmanageable. As long as Mr. DeBell didnâtâ
Whistle.
Oh God, how could she have forgotten the whistling? It had been Mr. DeBell last night, and heâd been whistling. Had he always been able to do it? Was that why he was such a good salesman? Had he used it to convince Lucretia to take in his bastard children? Or had the ability been brought forth by the insectsâ bites, their venom acting as a murderous muse?
Regardless, she was once more helpless against his somber tune.
She wasnât the only one this timeâshe nearly fell inward as the door opened behind her. But the wiry guard steadied her, pushed her forward, and stepped out. Copeland followed a second later, a jumble of papers in his hands and a bemused look on his face.
âLeave my family alone,â Mr. DeBell somehow said through his whistling, the words as haunting as they were windy. âDo your justice to me but leave my family alone.â
Neva tried to cry out that his family stood before him if heâd only look. But she couldnât do anything other than what his melody bade her. She took four steps forward, swiveled, and took four steps backâthe door was still open. Mr. DeBellâs song ordered her to close it.
Her hand complied by gripping the knob, but her eyes rebelled by seeking his. They held no recognition, only misery. Misery, and self-hate, and bewilderment.
Neva empathized with it all. She ached to go to him, to unbend her disguise and tell him she understood. But all she could do was slam the door.
Chapter Twenty-Three
FEW PEOPLE WERE IN the Court of Honor to witness Neva, the Pinkerton, and the wiry guard march out of the Administration Building. Which was just as well because their movements were sharp and stiff, their feet finding no rhythm in the strange music that compelled them to spasm off in different directions like a disbanded trio of marionettes.
Mercifully, the whistling faltered once Neva goosestepped within armâs length of the Terminal Station. As the tune waned in her blood, she sagged against an empty ticketing counter, forcing herself to breathe slowly until sheâd calmed enough to consider what had just happened.
Mr. DeBell was so convinced of his guilt that heâd turned himself in and resisted the temptation to whistle his way free ... If he could even control the whistling. So what were the chances heâd let her rescue him? Poor, most likely. Exceedingly poor. Heâd always been hard to sway once set on a course of action. But if she went to him as herself, without the guise of Arthur Johnsonâcould she convince him? What if she brought Derek? Was there was even time for that?
Someone called her name. Neva looked in the voiceâs direction and saw a Columbian Guard coming toward her, his face partially shadowedâmost of the Fairâs electric lights had been shut off for the night. For a moment, she thought it was the wiry guard. But then she realized he didnât know her true identity, and that sheâd unbent her disguise somewhere between the drunk tank and the Terminal Station; her bone structure was her own again.
âNeva!â the
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