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Gaslight Hades by Grace Draven (8)

CHAPTER EIGHT


Nathaniel followed his most current nighttime visitor to Highgate past the towering obelisks flanking Egyptian Avenue and on to the Circle of Lebanon. Lenore’s stray mongrel padded silently beside him, ears forward and alert.

This intruder moved like a cat: silent and fleet with hardly a footprint to mark their passing. Nathaniel’s only clues to their presence were a sixth sense of recognition and the sweet perfumes of tobacco, licorice and honey.

He tracked his quarry to the steps leading to the inner circle of crypts. A figure sat casually on the bottom step, smoking a cheroot. The thin cigar’s burning tip glowed cherry-red in the darkness. A pair of eyes, black as the Chislehurst caves, with white pinpoint pupils, regarded him through a haze of smoke.

Whomever Nathaniel expected to find here, it wasn’t another Guardian, especially not this one. He gave a short bow. “I think you’ve wandered into the wrong bone yard, my lord. Kensal Green is a leisurely stroll south of Highgate.” He cocked his head. “Or are you visiting in hopes of a hunt?”

His brethren drew deeply on the cheroot, inhaling smoke and exhaling revenants that swirled and silently beseeched before fading into oblivion. His voice was raspy and held a thread of amusement. “Kensal Green swarms with gardeners at all hours. Tripping over one isn’t nearly as entertaining as confronting a body snatcher, though I begin to wonder which of the two is more ubiquitous in our cemeteries these days.” He gained his feet in one smooth motion and joined Nathaniel at the top of the steps.

Nathaniel clasped the other’s offered arm. “Good to see you, Gideon.”

Like Nathaniel, Gideon possessed the physical attributes of all Guardians: long, snowy hair and equally white skin, spectral eyes and the ability to protect his body in a hard shell of armor by simply willing its presence. He was the first of the Guardians and the deliverer of the other six from enslavement to a madman who fancied himself a god.

Gideon returned the welcoming clasp. “How are you, Nathaniel?” He offered the cheroot.

Nathaniel declined. “I thought you abandoned that vice.”

Gideon shrugged, and with a graceful sleight of hand, made the cheroot disappear. “Only in the house. I don’t wish to incur my housekeeper’s wrath.”

Nathaniel recalled a tall, elegant woman with hair the color of summer wheat, smiling eyes and soothing hands. Newly rescued by Gideon, and delirious with pain from the gehenna flowing through his resurrected body, he’d thought Rachel Wakefield an angel at first as she bathed his face and crooned soft assurances to him. “How is Mrs. Wakefield?”

“Quite well I suppose. She’s engaged to be married.” Gideon’s voice held a bitter edge, even while his expression remained studiedly bland.

He and Gideon shared a warped and twisted history. They were the alpha and omega in an exclusive club of a select, unfortunate few. They were not, however, close friends, and Nathaniel sensed the other’s reluctance to speak more of the woman who managed his household and aided him in rescuing the other Guardians. “Please offer her my regards and my congratulations,” he said.

Gideon nodded and eyed Nathaniel’s companion who eyed him back from behind her master’s legs. “Who is this?”

Nathaniel sighed. “It seems I’ve been adopted,” he said. No matter how often he turned the young hound over to Mrs. Morris for bathing, feeding, and coddling, the dog always returned to the abandoned rectory. Even Mrs. Morris’s tempting offers of bowls of food hadn’t lured her away, and the rector’s wife finally gave in, leaving the bowl with Nathaniel.

His visitor’s brief smile fled almost as soon as it appeared. “A good protector if trained right, and useful these days. Word’s reached me that resurrectionists attacked a woman here in Highgate yesterday morning.”

The admission surprised Nathaniel. He often employed the Morris couple to deliver messages for him. None had yet been dispatched to Gideon. “Word travels fast,” he said dryly. “I was intending to send you a message to request a meeting.”

Gideon chuckled. “You’ll learn over time that ghosts are the worst sort of gossip-mongers. Not much else to do when you’re trapped on the earthly plane except note the comings and goings of the living.” He sobered. “How is the young lady in question? Or have you heard anything?”

The scent of lemon still clung to his fingers from the letter Lenore had sent to Mrs. Morris, assuring her of her improving health and thanking her and her husband for their assistance. The rector’s wife had thoughtfully brought the letter to him just this morning so he might read it for himself. Its citrusy smell teased his nostrils when he unfolded the missive and silently read the words written in Lenore’s precise hand. He resisted the temptation to raise the letter to his nose and inhale, halted only by Mrs. Morris’s presence and her gaze on him as he read.

“According to the rector’s wife, she is recovering and in good spirits.”

He wished he could send a letter in return. What would he say?

I no longer sleep, but I still dream. You consume my thoughts, Lenore, and soothe my spirit.

He would write more, so much more. Wax rhapsodic over the feel of her in his arms, the taste of her in his mouth...

Nathaniel shook away the recollections shredding his focus and returned his attention to Gideon who watched him with a raised eyebrow. “Did your gossiping specters tell you what she caught the thieves doing?”

Gideon shrugged. “The usual, though doing so in the middle of the day is out of the ordinary. I assumed Tepes has raised his bounty. First thief with the prize takes the purse.”

“She caught them digging up a child’s grave.”

He’d told Lenore the elements didn’t bother him, though he felt their effect—the wetness of rain, the heat of the sun. And right now, the cold buffeting his skin from his companion’s silent fury plunged the temperature from frigid English winter to frozen Arctic tundra.

Gideon’s features had thinned to a skull’s mask, and his eyes narrowed to abyssal slits. “When I find the good doctor—and I will find him—I intend to allow him to fully embrace the history behind the name Tepes and nail his hat to his head,” he vowed in flinty tones.

There were no witnesses to the first Guardian’s execution of his creator, not even the other Guardians. Nathaniel suspected that whether swift or slow, Dr. Harvel’s death had been brutal and Gideon without mercy. He would show none to Tepes either.

The two men strode to the Lebanon Circle to stand beneath the ancient cypress tree. Nathaniel scanned the acres of tombstones, searching for the tell-tale flicker of dim lamplight or the metallic clink of grave-digging tools. Only the occasional wandering spirit roamed the cemetery. “Why does Tepes want dead children?”

The thought made him ill. Nathaniel held little affection for men of science. Admiration, yes. Guild mages and their ilk manipulated the world’s mysteries, scientists its wonders. But the quest for knowledge sometimes bred madness, and the men who lost their humanity were more often those who chased wonder and embraced brutality.

Gideon clasped his hands behind his back and paced. “Rumor has it he’s experimenting with an elixir, something that will turn those shambling dead he likes to puppeteer into something more than corpse automatons.”

A waning moon spilled feeble light onto the patch of dead grass under the Lebanon tree. Nathaniel’s veins throbbed under his skin. “Gehenna,” he said softly. “He’s trying to remake gehenna.”

Gideon nodded. “Whatever concoction he’s brewed right now is probably expensive and difficult to reproduce for experimentation. A smaller body needs a smaller dosage.”

“My God.”

“It was just a matter of time.” Gideon changed directions to wear a different path into the grass. “I destroyed all of Harvel’s notes. Everything down to the grocer’s bills he stashed in an herbal cabinet. If Tepes is making liquid hell, he’s doing so on his own from the ground up.”

Nathaniel’s heart pumped his own gehenna blood through his body at an ever quickening pace. “If he manages to make a Guardian of his own...”

Gideon’s hollow laughter lacked any mirth. “He won’t. Harvel’s mistake was in keeping our minds, and therefore our free will, intact. He paid the price. Tepes won’t take that risk. Whatever he tries to animate will be nothing like us.” Brittle grass crackled under his feet. “As much as I dislike drawing the Mage Guild’s attention to us, we’ll need their help. We’re seven Guardians with acres of graves to watch over at all times. Tepes has significantly raised his bounty if resurrectionists are willing to exhume a body before the rest of London has sat down for dinner. The cemeteries will swarm with the bastards. A handful of second-tier mages working with each Guardian can provide enough oversight to prevent complete chaos.”

“I’ve already contacted the Mage Guild. Five second-tiers arrive here at dawn next Tuesday.” Nathaniel might have laughed at Gideon’s stunned look if things weren’t so grim. “I didn’t know about the doctor’s latest machinations. My request for help stems from a personal matter. I leave for Gibraltar and will return in a fortnight. I intended to include that news in my message to you.”

The Morrises had been an invaluable help to him the previous day, delivering Lenore safely to her home in Camberwell and a message from him to the Guild House in the City of London.

Gideon’s eyebrows rose. “Taking a holiday?”

He wished such were the case. In his previous life, he often dreamed of whisking Lenore off to places beyond gray London. Her traveler’s soul would have gloried in such sights as the blue Mediterranean and sun-kissed Greek isles or the lavish gardens of the Alcazar de los Reyes in Cordoba.

“Nothing so delightful,” he replied. “I will be on an airship once more.”

Gideon turned a gimlet stare on him. “Not the Pollux?” He scowled. “Why would you put yourself through such an ordeal?”

In the early days of Nathaniel’s rehabilitation, memories of his life—and his death—threatened to overwhelm his fragile sanity. Spilling them out in long, rambling screeds to Gideon had kept him anchored, able to merge each one back into its place without shattering his mind. The recollections of his last battle on the Pollux still sent tremors through him.

“Not the Pollux,” he said. “A new ship. The Terebellum. A harmless training mission for her new crew. I will be a...guest on board.”

Gideon patted his chest as if a pocket hid somewhere behind his armor. “I need another cheroot.” He gave up on the pocket and put Nathaniel back in his sights. “You’ve answered my first question but not the second. Why?”

“I should make a wish. Two wishes. That you come back to me so I can tell you...tell you yes instead of no.”

Those words had wrought more life inside him than all the voltage Harvel once slammed into the cold body that now housed Nathaniel’s soul and memories. They revived a hope he thought long dead, offering a second chance—once improbable, then impossible, and now within reach—to reclaim Lenore as his. He’d sail a skiff to Hell if necessary.

“To assure another’s safety,” he said.

Gideon’s stygian gaze intensified. “The inventor’s daughter will be on that airship.”

Nathaniel nodded. “She will.”

“Does she know yet who you are?”

“No.”

“It’s probably best she remain ignorant of your identity.”

Gideon gave him a puzzled look. “I am curious as to how you managed to get yourself invited aboard an airship. Guardians are usually only welcomed at burials, and only if they stay out of sight.”

Had it been any other captain besides Nettie, such a miracle would never have occurred. Even now, there was a chance she’d change her mind. Nathaniel had already figured out a way to stow aboard if necessary. “I can be very charming when I put my mind to it.”

Gideon snorted. “Obviously.” He held out his hand to Nathaniel who shook it. “When you return, contact me. I will call a gathering of all Guardians. We’ll meet with the Guild Counsel to discuss what’s to be done about the rats defiling the cemeteries.”

Nathaniel noticed Gideon made no mention of Tepes. The good doctor’s fate was sealed regardless of whatever the Guild decided. The only thing Gideon might still have yet to determine was which type of nail he’d choose—French horse or ox shoe.

He bowed once more, this time in farewell. Gideon paused before descending the stairs to the circle vaults and catacombs. Moonlight painted a silver nimbus on his hair. “Nathaniel, Spain isn’t the Redan, but any flight is dangerous as you well know.” His pupils were almost incandescent in the darkness. “How often can you ride the pale horse and fall? You may not rise again.”

Nathaniel had no answer for him. “Farewell, friend. Expect my message upon my return.”

The other nodded and was soon embraced by the shadows that always welcomed the Guardians.

Nathaniel returned to the tree and the dog whose eyes gleamed as brightly as Gideon’s had. The pup’s tail thumped the ground. She pressed against his hip when he sat at the tree’s base, her head between her paws. She cast an odd shadow across the grass—that of a great hulking mass with a ridged back and muscular shoulders, a beast of Herculean proportions that protected the dead alongside her master.

A thought tickled Nathaniel’s fancy. She still had no name. He grinned and stroked two fingers down the dog’s head. “Spot,” he said. “I think I’ll call you Spot.”