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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He was back in his original seat, feet up and arms crossed behind his head, an impassive expression on his face as he watched the Fairâs final transformation into a pyreâmuch of the Midway was burning now too. Nothing this far west was alight, but it wouldnât be long. Flames from the Javanese Settlement were already licking at the German Village.
Augie would have to be dealt with swiftly.
Neva had tried talking to him; there was nothing more to be said. And guns had proven of little use. That left only one thing she could think of, mad though it was. âWe have to emancipate the Wheel,â she said to Brin.
The Irishwoman squinted as if sheâd misread Nevaâs lips, or read them correctly and assumed she hadnât.
âYour stick babies,â Neva elaborated, overenunciating each syllable. âTheyâre still in the supports? You didnât move them?â
Brinâs eyes widened. âTheyâre still there. Might not be good, thoughârain probably got through the air holes I left for the fuse.â
âCan you check?â
Brin grinned and dashed to the closest of the Wheelâs supports, casting frequent glances at Augie. But he seemed indifferent to her movements. Or oblivious. Either way, he didnât stir as she made a rapid inspection.
Derek and Neva ducked into the Parisian Store to avoid a three-way scuffle. One of the men involved was a soldier, but she couldnât tell whose side the other two were on.
âDid you say, âstick babies?ââ asked Derek.
âDynamite. In the Wheel.â
He squinted at her, just as Brin had moments earlier.
âAnarchists,â Neva added, hoping that would be enough for now. âDo you have any matches?â
Derek patted his pockets, then shook his head.
Brin darted into the store and shut the door. âMost of the sticks are bad. A few might light if weâre lucky. But the fuse is a ruin. Wasnât tarred as well as Iâd hoped; itâs a sodden mess.â
Neva grimaced. She hated to ask more of Derek, but ... âCan you manage one more current?â she said, turning to him.
He didnât look like it. His face was wan, and he still couldnât stand well on his ownâat present, he was bracing himself against an empty display case. He said yes anyway.
âYouâre sure?â asked Brin as he moved to a broken window, using the case and then a bookshelf to stabilize himself. âYou donât want to wait for the fire to spread to the Wheel?â
âNot if the fuse is bad,â Neva said. She offered Derek the last cowry shell. âSee if this helps.â
He closed his hand on it, and she closed her hand on his. Derek didnât try to pull free. He seemed to understand that she needed to be a part of this, needed to help ...
Kill their brother.
Because thatâs what they were doing: they were going to kill Augie. Dear God.
How had it come to this? What was wrong with the world that they had to administer justice to their last remaining family member? And that he deserved it? But what else could they do?
Brin waved her arms in front of them. âShouldnât we get clear? If this works, and the Wheel falls this wayâit wonât be easy to run if weâre inside a wee building.â
âHave to be close,â Derek replied, his skin flushed with the shellâs energy and the resurging fever. âDoubt Iâll be able to run anyway.â
Neva gestured from Brin to the door. âYou go. Weâll finish this.â
She snorted. âAlready said no to that. Just target the far supportâthere.â The Irishwoman pointed through the window.
Derek nodded and aimed the hand Neva still held. âIf thatâs real,â he said, glancing at her belly, âyou should let go.â
She didnât move. âIâll keep you steady.â
He hesitated.
She swore and folded her stomach back in. âIâm fine. Take the shot!â
Shrugging, Derek loosed a current several times smaller than the one heâd launched at Kam, but much longer. It took only an instant to reach the spot Brin had recommended. Yet each inch of the boltâs advance seemed to send another round of charge searing through Nevaâs body, racing round and round as if she were a human coil. Then Derek somehow made his electricity hotter, less blue and more red, fiery and fast and ...
Explosive.
Neva didnât hear the dynamite detonateâher bone plugs remained firmly in placeâbut she felt the shockwave as the first stick went off. Followed by another, and another, until the Wheelâs northern support became a chain of fireworks that crumpled the leg and caused the entire structure to list.
But even as a less spectacular series of explosions wracked the other support, and her muscles quivered from the currentâs aftereffects, she had eyes only for Augie. The first blast had startled him, but the subsequent concussions knocked his mouth into a ... smile. An expression of acceptanceâand relief. Staying balanced despite the Wheelâs growing tilt, he stood in his carriage, walked to the window Brinâs shot had shattered, and stepped out.
Augie fell in a slow tumble, no web parachute extending from his shoulders as he completed a partial rotation before ...
He hit the low wall encircling the teetering attractionâs base.
His spine snapped.
The falling Wheel buried him.
Epilogue
ON BRINâS THIRD CALL to push, Neva did so with everything she had left, and her baby emerged into the Irishwomanâs waiting hands.
âItâs a boy,â Brin murmured, gently wiping the squalling little thing off and tending to the umbilical cord.
Neva watched with eyes she could barely keep open. Brin had urged her to ease the babyâs passage by stretching her womb, or enlarging her birth canal, or making her skin more pliableâanything that would accelerate the process and reduce the pain.
âChildbearingâs dangerous,â Brin had said at least once an hour. âYou could have bent the kid out ages ago and been done with it.â
And at least once every hour, Neva had said no. She wouldnât resort
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