Janna muttered something under her breath and an instant later, there was a small flash of blue light round the brooch. But that was all. The glow vanished as quickly as it had come. Ethan thought he glimpsed a pale blue figure standing off to the side, but by the time he turned to look, it had vanished. Janna stared at the gem for a moment, and then frowned.
“Nothin’,” she said, handing the brooch back to him. “You have somethin’ else?”
“No. But I saw her body. There wasn’t a mark on her. I knew that a conjuring had killed her, and so I tried a revealing spell.”
“And?”
He frowned. “And I didn’t learn anything. I thought the glow would pool at the spot where the spell struck her, and I thought it would reveal the color of the conjurer’s power, but…” He shook his head. “I suppose my spell didn’t work, or whoever killed her managed to conceal his conjuring.”
Janna sat forward once more. “Why? What did you see?”
“Her entire body glowed. The effect of the conjuring didn’t seem to be concentrated anywhere.”
Her dark eyes narrowed. “And what color did you see?”
“Silver, like starlight. There was really no color at all.”
“Damn,” Janna muttered. She sat back again, scratching her forehead.
“What is it, Janna?”
“This speller might o’ concealed th’ color o’ his power, but tha’s all. You saw just what you were supposed t’ see.”
“I don’t understand.”
“That ’cause you’re not thinkin’, Kaille. You’re assumin’ that she was killed by a spell.” Janna shook her head. “She wasn’t. She was killed for a spell.”
It made so much sense that Ethan’s first reaction was to be furious with himself for not realizing this on his own. His second was to be horrified.
Conjurers generally spoke of three kinds of casting. Elemental spells, the simplest, were fueled by one of the elements—fire, water, earth, even air. Living spells, which were more difficult and more potent, demanded blood or hair, leaves or bark—anything that came from a living creature or plant. All the conjurers Ethan knew relied exclusively on elemental and living spells.
But there was a third kind of conjuring, though some said it was merely a type of living spell taken to its most dangerous extreme: killing spells. Some called such conjurings sacrifice spells, but it was the same thing. A killing spell had to be fueled by the death of a living creature; any creature, though most powerfully by the death of a human. For a conjurer willing to take a human life there were few limits to what castings could accomplish. A living spell might draw a cup of water from the ground. A death spell could bring rainstorms to an entire countryside. A living spell could be used to murder a man. A killing spell could wipe out hundreds.
The real question, though, as Janna would have been the first to remind him, was not what could killing spells do, but what had they done in these two instances?
“This conjurer would have t’ be workin’ some mighty spells,” Janna said, breaking a lengthy silence. “Somebody’d notice.”
“You would think. You ever used a killing spell, Janna?”
“Killed a goat once. For a love spell, I think it was. Some wealthy man wanted a girl, an’ she didn’ wan’ him. Took all th’ power I’ve got.”
“Did it work?” Ethan asked.
Janna glared at him. “All my spells work.” After a moment, she gave a small jerk of her head, pointing at him with her chin. “What about you? You ever use a killin’ spell?”
Ethan shook his head. “No, never. I went a long time without conjuring at all—when I was a prisoner—and I’m not as accomplished at casting as I should be. To be honest, the more powerful conjurings scare me.”
“They should. Spellmakin’s nothin’ t’ play at.”
“Have you heard anything? You usually know what’s going on in the lanes, especially if there’s conjuring involved.”
She regarded him sourly. “You still not offering money?”
“I still don’t have any,” he said, chuckling. He quickly grew serious again. “You said it yourself, Janna. This conjurer would have to be casting some pretty potent spells. Dangerous ones, and not just for the people he’s killing. If you know anything, you need to tell me.”
It was like getting a street urchin to admit that he had stolen from a peddler. “It’s not much,” she said after a long time, sounding annoyed that he was making her tell. “Might not be anythin’ at all.”
“Let me be the judge of that.”
“It’s been a while now. This was back in the fall.”
“On Pope’s Day?” Ethan asked.
“Before then,” she said, clearly irritated by the interruption. “It was th’ day those two people got themselves hanged.”
“The Richardsons?”
“Yeah, that’s them. The ones who didn’ take care o’ their little ones.”
For close to a year, since their hanging in October, Ethan hadn’t given a thought to Ann and John Richardson. Now they had come up in conversation twice in two days. Odd. And perhaps important.
Janna pointed toward the southern end of the Fat Spider. “Their hangin’ was right over there,” she went on. “Right by th’ town gate. Big crowd came t’ watch. An’ that day, right in th’ middle o’ the hangin’ I felt a spell. A strong one,” she said, her brow wrinkling. “Stronger even than I can do. I’d bet everything I got that it was another killin’ spell. Nothin’ else feels like that.”
“And the victim?” Ethan asked.
“That’s just it,” Janna said, shaking her head. “They never found one. I didn’ tell anyone, ’cause I don’ need that kind o’ trouble, if you know what I mean. But so far as I know, they never found anyone.”
“Maybe it wasn’t a person.”
“Thought o’ that,” Janna said. “But a spell that strong…” She shrugged.
“So you think he’s killed three times, not two.”
“And tha’ means he’s cast three powerful spells. You find out wha’ those spells did, an’ you’ll find your speller.”
Ethan considered this. There had been times when he’d wondered if Janna wasn’t a bit mad, but there could be no disputing her logic in this instance. She was right; the spells were everything.
He drank a bit more of the watery Madeira, then placed his cup on the table and stood.
“Thank you, Janna,” he said. “Next time I come I’ll make sure to have a few shillings in my pocket.”
“You do that,” she said without a trace of humor.
He started for the door.
“Wait.” Janna stood, walked behind the bar, and stepped into a back room. Ethan peered into the small room, wondering what she wanted with him. When at last she reemerged, she carried a small cloth pouch, which she handed to him.
It was light, and held some sort of leaf, an herb of some kind, with a sharp, unpleasant smell.
“That’s mullein,” Janna said. “Powerful protection.”
It was more than that. Mullein might have been the most potent of all warding herbs used by conjurers. It strengthened all spells, but it was especially effective as a shield against hostile conjurings. It could also be added in small amounts to tonics for coughs and fevers, and in poultices for wounds. This was as generous a gift as he had seen Janna give to anyone. Perhaps she liked him more than he thought.
“Thank you, Janna,” Ethan said. “I owe you. When I have some money…”
She shook her head.
“Never mind that. You watch yourself, Kaille,” she said. “Between this speller and Sephira Pryce, you got some nasty folk wishin’ you harm.”
As if I need Janna to tell me that. “Again, thank you.”
“Now, go. I got things t’ do.” She softened the words with a rare smile.
Ethan grinned back and let himself out.
Chapter
TWELVE
Ethan stepped onto the filthy, rain-slicked lane and started back
toward the center of the city. He needed to return the brooch to Abner Berson and ask the merchant if he wanted Ethan to continue his inquiry. Ethan didn’t wish to end it before he found Jennifer’s killer, but Berson hired him to find the brooch, as both Yellow-hair and the ghostly girl, Anna, had reminded him. He had done that. It was up to Berson to tell him to continue or desist.
As he walked, he tried to think of what connections might exist between the Richardson hanging, the Pope’s Day parades, and the assault on Thomas Hutchinson’s house. All three events had drawn large crowds, many of them, no doubt, the “rabble” of which Hutchinson had spoken.
Ebenezer Mackintosh had led the South Enders on Pope’s Day, and he also had incited the mob to riot two nights ago. Ethan wouldn’t have been surprised to learn that he had been at the hanging, too. Hundreds had converged on the Neck that day to watch the notorious pair swing, and many had pelted the Richardsons with stones before the couple died. It was, he thought, just the sort of event to which Mackintosh and his faithful would have flocked. But he had never heard anything to indicate that the self-styled Commander of the South End was a conjurer, much less one as skilled as the speller who had created Anna.
Janna was right. It wasn’t enough simply to know that these killing spells had been cast. He needed to know what the conjurings had done, what evil the lives of this villain’s victims had purchased.
For that much he did know. Whatever power the killer had drawn from Jennifer Berson’s death and the deaths of his other two victims must have been dark. Such was the nature of killing spells, Janna’s “love spell” not withstanding. A conjurer willing to murder for a casting would do anything, destroy anyone, in pursuit of whatever wicked purpose drove him. This conjurer had to be found and destroyed.
Sephira wouldn’t be happy; unless somehow Ebenezer Mackintosh proved to be the greatest conjurer in all the colonies, neither would Thomas Hutchinson. And once the conjurer realized that Ethan hadn’t ended his inquiry, he would come after him, too. Ethan didn’t care. He knew that no one else could stand against this monster.
So resolved, Ethan arrived at the Berson home. William greeted him at the door and had him wait, dripping wet, in the entrance hall while he fetched the master of the house. A few moments later, Berson strode into the hall and led Ethan back to the study where they had spoken a few days before. Berson looked much the same as he had during their previous meeting, although perhaps the rings under his eyes were a bit more pronounced, his wig powdered with slightly less care. These past few days would have taken their toll on the man and his family.
“You have news for me?” the merchant asked when he and Ethan were seated by the hearth.
Ethan pulled the bundle containing the brooch from his pocket and held it out for Berson to take. The man hesitated, his gaze flitting from Ethan’s face to the package in his hand. Taking it at last, he unwrapped it with trembling hands. He let out a soft cry at the sight of the brooch and took a ragged breath. Tears ran down his cheeks.
“Thank you, Mister Kaille. You probably think me foolish, but I take some comfort in seeing this again.”
“I think I understand, sir,” Ethan said softly, keeping his gaze lowered.
“You’ve found the person who killed her, then?”
“No, sir.”
“But you know who did it. You must.”
Ethan shook his head.
“I don’t understand,” Berson said, staring down at the jewel lying in his thick palm. “How did you come by this?”
Ethan wasn’t sure how much to tell the merchant. It was one thing to tell Janna about the spells he had cast and the conjurer he had been pursuing. It was quite another explaining this to someone who wasn’t a conjurer himself, who probably feared such power and wanted nothing to do with those who wielded it. But in the end he decided that Berson deserved to hear everything. He told the man about both of his encounters with Anna, even going so far as to repeat her claim that Daniel Folter had killed Jennifer.
“And you’re quite sure that this Folter fellow didn’t kill her?” Berson asked when Ethan had finished.
“That’s right. I know for a fact that Daniel wasn’t a conjurer.”
Berson looked up from the brooch. “You say he ‘wasn’t’ a speller. Does that mean … he’s…?”
“He’s dead. He was killed just yesterday. This conjurer told me—speaking through the girl I mentioned—that he wants me to stop looking for your daughter’s killer. He threatened to kill me if I don’t.”
“I understand, Mister Kaille. I’m grateful to you for retrieving her brooch. You told me the other night that you didn’t usually take jobs that involved murder. You’ve done more than I could have expected.” He pushed himself out of his chair with a great effort. “I’ll pay you, and you can be free of this matter.”
“Actually, sir,” Ethan said, standing as well, “I don’t think you do understand. I’m not asking your permission to end my inquiry. I’m asking that you allow me to continue it.”
The merchant couldn’t have looked more surprised if Ethan had asked to lease a room in the house. “You want to go on with this?”
“I believe your daughter was killed for a larger, even more sinister purpose. I won’t burden you with details about conjuring and how my kind do what we do, except to say that there are spells so evil they require power drawn from human sacrifice. I believe your daughter died so that this conjurer could cast such a spell.”
“May God save us all,” the man whispered, actually recoiling from Ethan. “Can you prove this?”
Ethan shook his head. “No.”
“But then how—?”
For several moments, Ethan refused to look at the merchant. At last, chancing a quick glance, he saw that Berson’s face had drained of all color.
“You needed … you needed her … her corpse, didn’t you?”
“Yes, sir,” Ethan said, his voice low.
“Damn. I didn’t consider that. I just … the thought of her lying there in the crypt … My wife couldn’t take it anymore. The customary four days just felt like too long a time.”
“I understand, sir.”
“You’re kind, Mister Kaille. But I’ve made this harder for you. So, what can I do to make up for it?”
“You can refrain from telling anyone what I’m doing,” Ethan said. “If someone asks, even a member of your household, tell them you’re satisfied that I’ve learned everything I can about Jennifer’s murder, that Daniel Folter is responsible for her death, and that as far as you’re concerned the matter is closed.”
“Even people within my home?” Berson asked. “Surely my wife—”
Ethan raised a hand. “Please, sir. I’m not going to lie to you. I fear this conjurer, not least because I don’t know who he is. I’m sure your wife wouldn’t knowingly do anything to jeopardize the inquiry or my life. But I would feel safer if we could keep this matter between the two of us.”
“All right,” Berson said soberly. “Can I do anything else?”
Ethan felt heat rising in his cheeks. “To be honest, you can.” He gestured at his face. “The people who gave me these bruises took every coin I had, including the money you gave me. I managed to pay for my lodgings before they got to me, but I have no coin for food or anything else.”
Berson smiled and dug into his pocket for the change purse Ethan had seen the other day. “Of course, Mister Kaille. Will five pounds be enough?”
“Two would be enough, sir.”
“Well, I’ll give you five anyway.” The merchant handed him the coins. “Considering all you’ve done on our behalf and what you have endured to retrieve the brooch, it’s the least I can do.”
Berson led him back to the entrance hall and pulled open the door. He glanced behind him and said in a booming voice, no doubt so the others would hear, “Well, Mister Kaille, I’m grateful to you for finding my daughter’s brooch and putting this matter to rest. Best of luck to you.”
“Thank you, si
r,” Ethan said, gripping the merchant’s proffered hand.
Berson winked at him and said in a low voice. “May the Lord keep you safe, Mister Kaille. I’ll look forward to our next conversation.”
Ethan nodded and left the house, thinking that for all the complaining he heard in the Dowser about wealthy men and their ways, Abner Berson struck him as no less kind or honorable than anyone living in one of Boston’s more modest quarters.
Reaching the end of the broad stone path in front of Berson’s house, Ethan stepped out into Beacon Street, and immediately found himself face-to-face with Nigel, who looked as wet and bedraggled as an overlarge hound. Ethan took a step back, intending to run, but then thought better of it. If there was one of them, there were probably five. Ethan had no doubt that Sephira’s toughs had him trapped. Instead, he pulled out his blade and pushed up the sleeve of his coat.
“No need for that,” Nigel said in a low drawl. “She jus’ wants a word.”
“Right,” Ethan said. “If you don’t mind, I’ll keep my blade out anyway.”
Nigel merely shrugged and started walking away. “Follow me,” he said, not even bothering to look back.
Ethan hesitated, then followed. Gordon and Nap fell in step beside him, seeming to materialize out of nowhere. He heard footsteps trailing him as well.
“Do you all live together, too?” Ethan asked, glancing at the two men walking with him.
Gordon glowered at him but said nothing. Nap chuckled.
The toughs escorted him east and then south, past King’s Chapel and the Old South Church toward the more open lands around d’Acosta’s Pasture. At last, they came to a large house on Summer Street that stood only a short distance from the soaring wooden steeple of the New South Church. This wasn’t considered the most desirable place to live in Boston—that would have been back where the Bersons had their home. It wasn’t even the best street of the South End. But it was a good neighborhood nevertheless, and far better than Sephira Pryce deserved.
The house, Ethan had to admit, appeared from the street to be tasteful and elegant. It was large and constructed of the same white marble used to build the Berson home, but it wasn’t as ostentatious as Ethan would have expected the Empress of the South End’s home to be.
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