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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She needed to soften him first. âWhy do you think I barricaded this room so no one would come in while the Fair was being dismantled? Why do you think I started binding the body as it regenerated? Regenerated, mind you, like some horrible lizard. Why do you think I watched over this thing for most of a year, alone in the shell of the White City, enduring hunger and cold, while taking a knife to each new guise to continue the cycle? Why, Derek? Because I enjoyed it? Do you really think me such a witch?â
âNo, but ... Christ in Heaven, Neva, what am I supposed to think?â
The energy went out of her. âIâm sorry. I know this must look mad. Iâm not sure it isnât.â She gripped the front legs of her chair. âBut I think the person in the backâthe core person; not the guisesâset everything in motion last summer. The insects, the brands, the deaths: itâs responsible for all of them.â
âAnd why are you so sure?â
âThe insects, for one. That much seems clear. They havenât tried to bite me again, or anyone else I know of. Itâs almost like theyâre ... waiting for direction.â
Derek scanned to either sideâthere was barely a bug to be seen now. âAll right. Why else?â
âI recognized some of the guises. Not the first few, but the fifth was a trapeze artist from Barnum & Baileyâs.â
âThe circus?â
âYes. SheâNoraâdisappeared one day about two years ago, never to be seen again ... until last December, when she made an appearance in the back.â Neva gestured at the rear of the storeroom.
Derek mulled this over before nodding for her to continue. âWho else?â
âThe eleventh guise, a Mr. Percy Coggins.â Neva paused to see if this registered with Derek. He gave her a blank look. âOne of the victims from the Fair,â she elaborated. âI didnât know him by sight, but his name was in the papers. And that guise knew who he was; I checked up on him after. Went to his house and managed to see a picture of him. It was a mirror image.â
âEerie.â
âVery. Not all the guises are of the deceased, of courseâyou saw Hatty hale and whole just a few hours ago. And there was another guise that remembered himself enough to give me an address. When I went there, the living original answered the door.â
âChrist,â Derek murmured.
âLastly, I think the skinchanger is responsible because of what happened with Wiley and Mr. DeBell.â Neva slumped after saying thisâit was one of the worst pieces of the puzzle, almost as bad as Augie being the porter.
âAnd what did happen with Edward?â
âHe died.â
âYes, in the Administration Buildingââ
âNo, in the Stockyards.â
Derek blinked. âOh.â
âYou see it now.â
He winced but spelled it out anyway. âThe body the Pinkertons originally thought was Edwardâsâthat was him in truth?â
âYes. Probably killed shortly after he mailed his letter to you.â
âGodâs wounds ... And the Edward at the Administration Buildingââ
âWas the skinchanger, in Mr. DeBellâs guise.â
âI suppose that explains how the undertaker âlostâ Edwardâs body.â
âRight. The skinchanger woke in Mr. DeBellâs coffin, but in Wileyâs guise, walked out ...â
âAnd came to see you.â
Neva imagined herself adopting an impassive expression, willing herself to do so. Sheâd explained how sheâd killed Wileyâs guise, but not how sheâd lain with it first. She wasnât ready to speak of that.
âGodâs wounds,â Derek repeated. âIs it the blood, then? Is that why heâitâkills his victims? Does he need to ... take some of their flesh in order to make it his own?â
âHe doesnât necessarily need to kill them. Thereâs Hatty, remember, and the fellow I met. But yes, I think the skinchanger has to have a reference point for each new guise. The newspapers seem to have been right about that much: the consumption of the victims is real.â She shuddered. âIn the Administration Building, Wileyâs blood splashed everywhere. And I saw a fleck of his ribs fly into the gunshot wound in the chest of Mr. DeBellâs guise. That must be enough.â
Derek began to pace. âThe insects, though, and the brands. And the feverâwhat of them?â
âI donât know. Maybe the bugs had a trace of the skinchangerâs madness in their bite? Perhaps thatâs why it made me so crazed ... so bloodthirsty. Brin said it was the same with her. It would explain why Augie did what he did.â
Their brotherâs name provoked a long silence as Derek completed a second circuit of the room and Neva tried not to think about Augieâs terrible last moments.
âAll right,â Derek said as he started his third lap. âAll right. If this is trueâand Iâll confess I find myself believing more of it than I would have thought possibleâthen why are you still here? Why are you doing this?â He made a cutting motion with his hand, miming the slice of her knife. âWhy not burn the skinchanger and be done with it? If burning would even end matters ...â
âIâm not sure it would,â she said quietly. âBut as for me, Iâll ask you again: why do you think I chose as I did?â
Derek stopped pacing and gazed at the back of the storage room. âYou want to see Augie again.â
âAnd Mr. DeBell. And Wiley. Maybe Kezzie, too, for Brin; theyâre all in there somewhere. Waiting to be brought out.â Neva cocked her head to regard her brotherâher living brotherâfrom a different angle. âWouldnât you like to see Mr. DeBell once more? Talk to him one last time, now that you know the truth?â
âBut it wouldnât really be him.â
âNo, it would be a guise. Of course. But what if the guise remembered enough to tell you what you want to know?â
âItâs random, this process? You canât predetermine which guise will appear?â
âNot that I can tell.â
âThen what if, in trying to wake a certain guise, you rouse the core aspectâthe skinchanger itself?â
Nevaâs eyes narrowed. âThen we could have justice.â
âIs that what youâre waiting for?â
She considered telling him the rest of it: that she thought she knew who the
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