Gabriel forced himself not to roll his eyes in impatience. “You’re safe here, indoors in this house, and I’ll only be a couple of hours.”
“Bloody lot you know,” she muttered, turning toward the wall. Her dress was going to need pressing before she could wear it again.
“What was that?”
She rolled around to face him, her eyes wide with apparent fright. “Stay, Gabriel! I don’t want to be left with nothing but Walter’s counsel.”
“Walter! Walter is dead because your — your new lovers were jealous! Walter’s just a half-wit ghost now.” He blinked away tears impatiently. “Walter’s not the—father of your child.”
Lizzie shook herself and looked around the dim-lit room and absently smoothed out the pleats of her dress. Gabriel wearily recognized one of her abrupt changes of mood.
She muttered something of which he caught only the words my child.
“What?” he snapped.
She sighed, calm now. “Nothing. Go to your school. Your students matter more to you than I do.”
“Damn it, Guggums—”
“You were perfectly beastly to me at dinner.”
“I was—? Who was it made such a scene that we had to run out? Algy must think you’re insane.”
“Algy loves me like a sister. You love me as a model for pictures.” Gabriel started to object, but she interrupted, “Give me my laudanum bottle, and then go.”
“You’ve had quite enough of that damned stuff. You hardly know where you are these days. I don’t—”
She rolled her eyes and shifted on the bed as if to stand up. “Can’t you do even that for me? Never mind, I’ll get it for myself.”
Furiously, Gabriel snatched up the bottle and strode to the bed and shoved it into her hand. “Here,” he said, “take the lot!”
She was sobbing weakly behind him as he strode out the bedroom door and down the stairs.
CHRISTINA HAD HAD TO knock at the side window of the hansom cab on the corner, waking the cabbie, and now that she had climbed out at the river end of Villiers Street ten minutes later, he swung down from his perch at the back and stepped up into the cab again to resume his interrupted sleep.
“I’ll be right here when you’re ready to return,” he said gruffly, pocketing her shilling and pulling his collar up and his hat down. “Unless somebody hires me first.”
“I shall hope that you remain undiscovered,” said Christina, shivering in the chilly fog that swirled up the street from the river.
The cab’s right wheel was up over the curb on the pavement, below a dark building with a crane and a wide, shuttered door dimly visible overhead on the second floor, in a shadowed and mist-veiled corner of the street, and it seemed very possible that no late-night revelers would venture beyond the crowded, jostling cab stand under the streetlamp a dozen yards back up the street.
Even on this cold Monday night the fog glowed back there around a place called Gatti’s Music Hall, and a man was out front shouting through a speaking trumpet about the musical show inside, which was apparently the source of the occasional spirited chorus of “Hee-haw” that rang between the blurred buildings and out across the river.
Beyond the chest-high brick wall along the river-side lane, the river itself was invisible in what seemed to be a solid cloud descended out of the sky — and she remembered her father once saying that the clouds of night were not the same as the clouds of day.
On the far side of the river, she knew, were warehouses and the ironworks and the tall shot tower, where molten lead was dropped from a height into cold water to make the little balls men shot birds with, but tonight those places all might as well be on the moon — the river of fog seemed to extend out to the sky, and with an odd thrill she remembered her childhood dream of the Sea-People Chorus, the thousands of ghosts in the river waving jointless arms at the night sky.
She straightened her shoulders and began resolutely walking down the street in that direction, away from the lights and the noise.
On clear nights, visitors from the country might be waiting at the stairs by the seventeenth-century water gate, which was all that remained of the old York House, to hire a boat and see the sights along the river, but when Christina walked between the pillars and reached the top of the stairs, she saw only four or five watermen sitting in a half-walled shed down to her left, huddled around a couple of lanterns. Along the narrow, fading pier, their boats sat in the water like sleeping gulls.
The stone steps below the arches of the water gate were wet, and Christina gripped the marble rail with her gloved right hand as she cautiously descended. The night was suddenly quiet down here in the dimness — she could hear a bell ringing faintly out on the river, and she thought she could hear frogs croaking not far away. The fleeting scent of tobacco smoke made the air seem warmer.
“Be you wanting to cross, miss?” called one of the gray-bearded men in the shed. “It’s no night for it, even with the purl men still out, mad fools.”
Now that she had reached the desolate river shore below the steeply slanted masonry of the City’s edge, Christina was not anxious to look for a ghost, even or especially her father’s, and the phrase that sounded like “pearl men” had an unwelcomely macabre sound. She imagined pearl-eyed drowned mariners rowing boats out there in the dark, not needing sight on the infinite river.
“Pearl men?” she asked, shivering as she picked her way over half-seen gravel and sand toward the yellow light of the kerosene lanterns. The fog moving in off the river smelled of the sea, though the tide didn’t appear to be high.
“Purl men is beer sellers,” the man said, to Christina’s instant relief. “It’s their bells you hear out there, looking to be hailed by sailors on moored ships. Used to be they’d mix wormwood in the beer, called it purl, and the name’s stuck.” The man stood up from the wooden box he’d been sitting on, took a short clay pipe out of his mouth, and said, “I’m called Hake. Who be you lookin’ for, miss?”
She was standing now only a couple of yards from the open side of the shed, and the air on her cheeks was perceptibly warmer there, but the faces of the other watermen, all middle-aged or older, were still just noses and gray beards and wrinkled foreheads picked out against the darkness by the lantern glare.
“My name is… Christina.” She could see the cloud of her breath now. “Must I be looking for someone?”
“Oh, aye. Your dress and manner are modest, and you’re alone. You hear ’em all yonder,” he added, waving at the nighted river behind her.
Christina turned to peer uneasily down the invisible shoreline.
“All I hear is frogs.”
One of the other men laughed or coughed. “Ain’t frogs,” he said.
“Nights like this,” said old Hake kindly, “fine folk sometimes come down here, not to hire a boat.”
“Nobody comes to hire a boat,” growled another bony old fellow. “Not since the new London Bridge.”
“Sure enough,” agreed Hake. “We’re well after being ghosts ourselves. The old bridge, gone these thirty years, had nineteen arches, and you needed a licensed waterman to shoot any one of them, but this new bridge has got only five arches, all very wide — a child could row you through ’em.”
“Almost ghosts yourselves,” echoed Christina cautiously.
“Aye,” said Hake with a nod, “there’s no apprentices to speak of anymore. Soon enough we’ll be out there in the dark on the other side of the stairs, with none anymore manning this pier to listen to us.” He smiled at her through his gray beard. “Who were you looking for?”