Before anyone could respond, another stirring on the floor caught Miss Temple's eye. Mr. Leveret sputtered and struggled to rise. He looked about him, taking in the crushing vision of his soldiers all dropped to the floor, saw the glass woman and Chang, and then lastly the Contessa. He rose to his knees, his voice pinched with disapproval.
“I must protest, madame, and demand that in all decency—”
The Contessa's bullet caught Leveret square between the eyes, a spout of dark red blood flipping in the air as he went down. Charlotte Trapping screamed aloud, and screamed again, drawing her shaking hands up to her face. Mr. Leveret did not move.
“Be quiet, Charlotte,” warned the Contessa coldly. “Or I will kill your child.”
She extended the pistol to where Francesca lay curled, looking altogether too small. Her mother's next cry stopped in her throat with a moan. Miss Temple turned with helpless anger to Chang. “Will you not do something?”
“She is right,” he said quietly. “If I take Margaret's head, nothing stops the Contessa from killing as many of us as she has bullets.”
The hard truth of his words fell flat upon the room, and no one spoke. Then Robert Vandaariff coughed wetly He watched them with one open eye from where he lay slumped, the corners of his mouth touched with a distant bemusement. The Contessa called sharply to the glass woman.
“Margaret, I would put it to you that nothing between us need prevent an understanding now. We have an unparalleled opportunity, you and I—to create in a stroke a new future. My former agreement lay with Harald Crabbé, Francis Xonck, and the Comte d'Orkancz. Crabbé is dead. Francis is ill. The Comte has been reborn. You and I stand opposed. You already rule the Ministries—take Crabbé's place. With the Comte reborn and Francis restored, we can begin again as equal partners.”
The depths of Mrs. Marchmoor's blue eyes flickered, but she did not respond.
“Your only alternative fate is Cardinal Chang's blade. Come—together, Margaret, we will be truly unstoppable.”
“Francis Xonck tried to kill you,” said Chang.
“And I to kill him,” the Contessa replied. “What of it? This factory is reason enough to retain Xonck Armaments within the portfolio— do you think I can trust Charlotte? Besides, there is also that claim of Margaret's to settle… that Oskar is unclean. In my opinion, restoring Francis to good health is a perfectly reasonable test, demonstrating Oskar's sound mind and intact knowledge. It is entirely sensible.”
Miss Temple felt the bile at the edge of her mind, curdling her concentration like tart lemon dripped in milky tea.
“But this man is not the Comte—not the Comte you knew!”
“Be quiet, Celeste. Come, Margaret… do we have an agreement?”
“If he can restore Francis…” The glass woman's words hung hesitant and thin, broken ice stretched across the skin of a dark pool. “Perhaps the corruption… is not important…”
The Contessa turned toward Robert Vandaariff. “What do you say to that, Oskar?”
“What can I say, Rosamonde?”
“You can agree.”
“And what of this… supposed ‘taint’?”
“Do you feel unclean?”
“I feel clean as Arctic ice.”
“He is lying!” cried Miss Temple. “For pity's sake, I touched the book—I know!”
“If that is so,” the Contessa rejoined, “then we simply administer the Process once again, or find an empty book to re-vacate his mind, or wrap him in chains until the body of Robert Vandaariff is tractable once more.”
“Your sentiment is touching.” Vandaariff straightened his filthy coat with meticulous small tugs.
“Come now, Oskar, I am overjoyed at your return. Will you join us? Surely you would prefer not to be forced?”
“My goodness. How would you do that?”
The Contessa laughed. “How to decide? There is no time for seduction, and no one you care for to threaten. I could put this gun against your knee—one shot and the Doctor would no doubt be forced to amputate with a penknife!” She laughed again. “And think of all the money you would save, buying but one shoe!”
Vandaariff laughed with her. “It is a very good thing we are such friends. Of course I will join you, and join Margaret. I suppose I am even in Cardinal Chang's debt for stabbing me when he did—otherwise I should surely have twisted your lovely neck clean through.”
“Is… is Francis alive?” It was the tearful voice of Charlotte Trapping.
“O certainly,” replied Robert Vandaariff mildly. “One can see him breathe.”
He snapped his fingers at Fochtmann, who—after a wary glance back to Mrs. Marchmoor—lifted Xonck into the chair that had held Vandaariff. Under Vandaariff's instruction he reattached the nest of stinking tubes and hoses and masks to Xonck's body. As he worked, Fochtmann cut away Xonck's clothing and exposed the gleaming dark wound in his chest. It throbbed with each heavy breath, like a parasite with intentions of its own.
“What will you do?” asked Doctor Svenson. “The glass has fused to his heart and lungs. How can you hope to extract it?”
“The dilemma is indeed perplexing,” agreed Vandaariff, tapping the pulsing wound with his fingernail.
“If you cannot do it, let him die.” This was Cardinal Chang.
“O I can do it,” replied Vandaariff. Behind him Francis Xonck opened his eyes and groggily shook his head, pushing without comprehension against his bonds. Vandaariff tightened the mask with a tug. He turned and met Miss Temple's gaze. Her throat clenched hard, the arrangement of copper wires and hose around Xonck seeming to twist before her eyes into letters, nearly forming words. She was suddenly terribly afraid, but she could not quite pierce his intention… and then she burst out coughing, unable to speak. Doctor Svenson stepped to her but Miss Temple pushed him away, waving her hand at Vandaariff.
“What is wrong with her?” demanded the Contessa.
“She is ill,” replied Vandaariff. “An effect of the glass. Just like poor Francis. Can you hear me, Francis? Are you alive?”
“Can you truly heal him?” asked Mrs. Trapping.
Vandaariff tied off the end of a black hose. “Do you want me to?”
“I… I do,” she whispered.
An excitement leapt to Vandaariff's eyes.
“But your brother is a wicked thing. If anyone deserves an agonizing death it is certainly Francis. No, Mrs. Trapping, I'm sure I don't believe you.”
“I want him as he was,” she insisted.
“You must convince me…”
“I want him back,” she whimpered.
“Back?” asked Vandaariff. “I see—so you can kill him yourself?”
“No,” sniffed Mrs. Trapping, but then was overtaken by sobs. “I do not know what I want at all!”
Robert Vandaariff sniggered, arch and vile. The Contessa spoke angrily. “When you open your mouth, Charlotte, it helps you not at all!”
“As if I had a choice! In anything!”
The Contessa snorted and pointed to the deathly pale little girl, huddled in an insensible ball at the feet of Mr. Phelps. “You might have remembered your daughter.”
“I might have—I might have?”
Mrs. Trapping took three quick steps toward the Contessa, like a high-strung dog, her hands raised, then staggered from an unseen blow. She wheeled to the glass woman in a tearful fury.