Susan Dennard - A Darkness Strange and Lovely
I paused, my left fist curling, and strode back toward him—but only far enough so he could hear me speak.
“No, you won’t go into my room again, Oliver. You won’t come near me ever again. I want nothing to do with you, do you understand? Elijah wasn’t the only necromancer in the family.” I thrust out a pointed finger, wishing with all my heart that my charade could be real. If only I were a necromancer. If only I were powerful enough to destroy those in my way.
But Oliver did not know I was bluffing, so I said with all the authority I could muster, “If you dare come close to me without my permission, I will use everything I know to destroy you.”
Chapter Six
I thought I would start bawling the moment I reached my cabin, but, in fact, being away from the depressed demon and his drink and walking with long, purposeful strides was enough to lift my mood —or at least to clear away some of the pulsing anger.
But not enough to calm my thoughts.
A demon? Bound to my brother by a necklace? An old man in Egypt?
I was more confused than ever . . . but I felt I could be certain of one thing: the drunk young man in the dining room was not Marcus.
I found Mrs. Brown in her dressing gown, lounging in one of the armchairs and reading. “Miss
Fitt,” she said with a nod.
I winced. “Please, just call me Eleanor.” Ever since I’d realized Miss Fitt sounded identical to
“misfit,” I had vowed I would never use my surname again.
She sniffed. “As you wish.”
“Where’s Lizzie?” I asked, crossing toward my bed.
“The bathroom, preparing her evening toilet.”
“Oh.” I peeked at what Mrs. Brown was reading as I passed: a book on manners. My lips twitched, and I wondered if it was the same book Daniel toted.
At that thought, an image of Daniel in a black evening suit materialized in my mind . . . and my mouth went dry. If anyone could fill out a dress suit well, I was certain it was he.
Clarence filled out his suit well too—
My lungs clenched shut, pushing out my air. I did not want to think of Clarence. Dwelling on his memory would stir up emotions I did not need.
I sucked in a shaky breath and dropped to the floor before my drawer. As I yanked out my nightgown, I checked quickly for Elijah’s letters—still nestled beneath my spare petticoat.
Right then the door swung open. Laure strutted in. “Ah, Mademoiselle Fitt! You were not in the saloon—you missed the most wonderful card game.” She stopped beside me and leaned onto her bunk, adding in a lower voice that smelled of wine, “Please tell me you did not spend the evening with the old goat.”
“The who?”
“Madame Brown.” She motioned to her chin and mouthed, “Beard. Like a goat.”
Despite my rattled nerves, I couldn’t help but laugh. “No, I spent most of the evening on the promenade deck.”
“Ah, do you feel better now?”
“Much.” I smiled.
“Magnifique. ” She bent down to her own drawer and withdrew a white shift. “Come, let us prepare for the night’s slumber. I wish to ’ave great dreams of true love and adventure.”
A little snort came from the armchair. Laure whirled around and wagged her finger in Mrs.
Brown’s face. “Oh, what do you know of l’amour, you old—”
“That’s enough.” I grabbed her arm and towed her to the door.
Laure hooted a laugh. Once we were in the hall and headed toward the bathroom, she whispered, “But she is an old goat, non?” She raised her voice in song. “Old goat! Vieille chèvre ! Old . . .” She trailed off as a wide-eyed Lizzie Brown walked by, her head swiveling to watch us pass.
I had to press my fingers to my lips to keep from laughing.
After we had used the bathroom, a stewardess came to our cabin to help us remove our dresses and —in Laure’s case—corset. I hadn’t worn one in months, and I rather liked the snide glares people gave me for it. One day the suffragists and I wouldn’t be the only ones foregoing the whalebone prisons.
By the time we were in our nightgowns, Laure’s wine giddiness had faded into wine exhaustion; and once the stewardess left, I practically had to carry her to her bunk. The Browns were already tucked in, and I waited until I could hear Laure’s heavy breathing before I switched on an electric lamp beside my bunk, pulled Elijah’s letters from my drawer, and spread them over my bed.
There were only eight in total, and if Oliver spoke the truth, then these were the most important. I started with the first, dated from the summer of 1873, when Elijah had first left.
As they had seemed when I’d originally read them, the letters were a confusing, rambling mess.
Mentions of his work were dropped in with names. A hotel steward, a cab driver, a librarian—they were all sprinkled around his day-to-day activities.
And then there were the lines addressed to me. The descriptions of places he thought I’d like, stories he knew I’d laugh at, and promises to come home soon.
In the second letter, Oliver’s name appeared twice, but it was only in reference to a joke. There was no mention of Oliver in the third letter, nor did anything crop up in the fourth or fifth.
Until my eyes lit on the name “Ollie” in the final line of the fifth.
Once, in Marseille, Ollie told me a hilarious riddle about Jack and the beanstalk, but since we were in the crypt of Notre-Dame de la Garde, our laughter echoed around all those soldiers’ tombs until the priest finally made us leave.
“Very useful story, Elijah,” I muttered under my breath. “You don’t even share the riddle’s answer.” All the same, now I knew that he must have called Oliver “Ollie,” and that nickname did appear rather frequently.
A yawn took over my mouth, and my eyes stung with exhaustion. I sank back on my bed. It was late, and I had eight more days of sailing to sort out things with this demon. I hadn’t felt a single twinge in my hand since leaving Philadelphia, and I had three roommates to awaken if anyone entered our cabin. For now I felt safe.
It wasn’t long before the rocking ship lulled me to sleep.
It was a dream. I knew it was a dream—I’d had it so many times before—and as always, I was terrified it would end.
Daniel, Daniel, Daniel. Smelling of machines and forest, tasting of salt. His lips pressed to my neck, his hand on my waist.
My hand—my right hand—pushed against his stomach, and my left scratched his back. My eyelids fluttered open, and I pulled back slightly. A yellow streetlamp shone on his sandy hair and sun-roughened skin.
“Empress,” he whispered. His lips locked back on mine, and I sank into the embrace.
Then, as always happened no matter how hard I clung to the kiss, the dream shifted.
Daniel sat at the edge of my hospital bed, his face cast in shadow. My wrist ached—my hand having recently been amputated—and was wrapped tightly in a bandage. My heart was cracking right down the middle, yet as long as I focused on my hand, on the laudanum pumping through me, I could keep going.
“You’re not in love with me, are you.” I spoke it as a statement and tried to ignore my pounding heart.
He twisted his head away. “It’s not that simple.”
“It’s a yes or no.”
“Then . . .” He set his cap on his head. “Then no. No, I’m not.”
A howl burst through the night.
Daniel’s head shot up. For a single breath, all was silent and still.
Then the howl came again. This was not part of the dream, I knew.
Daniel lunged at me. “Run!”
At that instant a wind broke through the open hospital window, as loud as a locomotive and filled with angry baying.
Daniel yanked me up. My bare feet landed on cold tile. “Run!” he roared, but when I glanced at him, I found someone else entirely.
Clarence Wilcox, dressed in an evening suit just as I’d seen him last. “You have to go!” He grabbed my elbow and pulled me into a sprint. We bolted for the hospital’s hallway.
No, now it was the ship’s hall. We were racing toward the main stairwell, red carpet underfoot.
And the boat rocked, fighting me.
“Faster, Eleanor! Faster!”
Another hand grabbed me from the other side. I choked at the sight of Elijah, filthy and huge—just as he had been before he died.
“Go!” he screamed, and suddenly we were racing twice as fast. My legs spun like wheels, but still
I could barely keep up with the two young men.
“Don’t stop,” Clarence shouted. “They’re almost here!”
The hallway blurred, shifting like paint into a murky, gray landscape. Barren, endless, this world was only broken by pinpricks of light across the sky.
Our feet pounded on wooden slats, and I realized with horror that we were on a rickety dock.
Splinters sliced into my bare soles, and a wind beat at us from behind. My nightgown whipped up into my face.
The howling of the dogs was deafening.
“We’re too late,” Clarence cried.
“Just keep going,” Elijah urged. Then he and Clarence released me, and they both fell back.
Somehow I pushed on. Ahead, a golden glow beckoned to me, growing closer and closer. I ran and ran and—
The wind shoved me. I flew forward onto my chest. My face slammed into the gray dock, and the roaring hounds swallowed everything. I tried to scrabble to my feet, but the moment I lifted my face, the howling stopped.
And I froze.
The dogs were there. Four of them, lips drawn back and fangs bared.
They were huge—bigger than me, bigger than a horse. Hulking, black, and with eyes of sun-bright yellow.
Eyes that were locked on me.
“Eleanor! Wake up!” I heard the voice, distant and dim.
I was shaking. Someone was shaking me.
“Wake up, El—wake up!”
And I knew that voice. This dock was a dream.
The moment the realization hit, the world winked out of existence. My eyelids popped open. I was staring at polished tan wood. The air was frigid.
“Eleanor, please wake up!”
I lifted my head, dazed, and found Oliver crouched over me.
“Where am I?” I tried to sit up, and he helped me rise.
“You’re on the bloody promenade deck—you almost walked off the edge.”
My eyes widened, and the contents of my stomach rose into my throat—because Oliver was right.
Three feet from my face was the railing.
And beyond that was the roiling, gray sea.
Somehow, I had sleepwalked onto the deck.
Oliver gasped. “Oh no.”
I wrenched my face toward him. “What?” In the swaying electric lights, his eyes were shining and his face was pink.
“Your . . . your face,” he said. “And your dress.”