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Jack glanced down at the red river of blood that trickled between his toes into the dirt, into that soft, malleable clay beneath London, and he smiled and he screamed again and he returned his gaze to that beautiful black bag and its dreadful instruments of instruction.

14

Day spotted Adrian March outside the prison walls, squatting on the curb and staring at a spot in the road. Day held out a hand to stop Hammersmith, and they waited until March stood back up before approaching him.

“What did you find over there?” Hammersmith said.

“Nothing,” March said. “Well, something.” He waved his hand abstractly at the road and the empty field and the train tracks nearby as he walked toward them. “Just something left behind by children.”

“I can’t imagine children out here.”

“Did you discover anything inside Bridewell?”

“Sir Edward was right,” Day said. “At least, I think he was. By the way, where were you?”

“Me? I waited for a bit at Scotland Yard, then followed you out here.”

“Why didn’t you come with the sergeant?”

“I never saw him leave Sir Edward’s office,” March said.

“Well, it’s good to have you here now,” Day said.

“Take a look at this, Inspector,” Hammersmith said. He had knelt on the road and was pointing to the spot where March had been looking.

“It’s nothing, I tell you,” March said.

“I don’t know about that,” Hammersmith said. “I think you might have stumbled across something after all.”

Day squatted next to Hammersmith. He was privately amused that Hammersmith gave no thought to grinding the knees of his trousers into the dirt, even after being reprimanded that very morning for his appearance.

He squinted and brought his lantern in closer to the road and saw a smudge of blue chalk, distorted by uneven cobblestones. The chalk appeared to have been clumsily rubbed out, but there was still a faint impression where it had ground down into the stones.

“It’s an h,” Day said.

“From here, it looks like a four,” Hammersmith said.

“No, you’re right,” Day said. “It’s a four, all right. And an arrow.”

“You think it means something after all?” March said.

“Well,” Day said, “probably not. I don’t mean to contradict you, sir.”

“Not at all,” March said. “Your eyes are no doubt better than mine in the dark. To me it looked like a child’s scribble and nothing more.”

“It may well be,” Day said.

“But it may be something else,” Hammersmith said. “The arrow’s pointing that way, across the field.”

“Shall we follow it?”

“It may be a waste of time.”

“On the other hand…”

Hammersmith stood and held out his hand to Day, pulled him to his feet, and they set off moving slowly away from the prison, their lanterns held high. March hesitated a moment, then drew his revolver and followed them into the high grass.

15

The ground beneath the ground was uneven, and Jack was still unsteady on his feet. Cinderhouse needed to help him occasionally when it came time for them to pick their way over broken stones or across overfull streambeds. They left a trail of Jack’s blood behind them, and he imagined each drop that fell from his wrists blossoming from the dark soil into tall black flowers, screaming and swaying like sirens. Jack was dismayed by how much muscle tone he had lost. He assumed his coordination and strength would return, but it would clearly take some time. Cinderhouse had given him his jacket, with the black darts dotted across the front and down the sleeves, but Jack was still naked from the waist down. His legs were skinny and scratched. Cinderhouse carried both the lantern and the black medical bag from the cell.

They found a shallow place and crossed an underground pond, small darting white creatures swarming around their ankles and between their toes. They walked through dense catacombs, human bones stacked high and deep, skulls piled high over their heads, and into a large open chamber that Jack imagined was the inside of some enormous whale carcass, grey wooden ribs arcing above them.

There they found the man’s unconscious body. Cinderhouse ignored it, walked right past it and started up a staircase that he said would lead them to a higher tunnel, but Jack stopped, his hand against the wall to help hold him up. He stood over the body and watched the man breathe, his chest rising and falling arrhythmically. There was a gash in the man’s head and his leg was badly broken. Dark sticky blood had pooled beneath him, but the wounded leg had begun to clot.

“Who do we have here?” Jack said.

Jack barely whispered, but the chamber caught his question and bounced it around the walls until it boomed down at Cinderhouse. The bald man turned and stood next to Jack, looking at the other man’s still and silent form, the legs and arms splayed across the cobblestones like those of a snipped marionette.

“He’s nobody,” Cinderhouse said. “An irritant.”

“Oh, but I like irritants,” Jack said. “For instance, I’ve become quite fond of you.”

Cinderhouse scowled, but accepted the insult. “He followed me down here. He was in Bridewell.”

Jack lowered himself slowly to his knees with a grunt and bent over the unconscious man. He brushed his hair out of his eyes and sniffed the man’s face, squeezed his mouth open and smelled his breath, sucked in the air from his lungs. Jack smiled and looked up at Cinderhouse.

“What was his name? Did you know it?”

“He called himself Griffin.”

“You say he was in the prison with you?”

“Yes. He was.”

“For how long was he there?”

“Not long. I know I saw him there the day before we escaped.”

“But not before that? How odd.”

“I don’t know,” Cinderhouse said. He squinted and scrunched his features so that he looked like a child trying to remember instructions. “I don’t think I saw him before that.”

“Almost as if he arrived just in time to escape, would you say?”

“I don’t know what you mean.”

“That’s all right,” Jack said. “Of course you don’t, my lovely little fly. Don’t trouble yourself.”

Cinderhouse smiled weakly, unsure of whether he had disappointed Jack. Jack stared down at Griffin and reached out, gently probed the wound on his leg. Griffin stirred and groaned in his sleep. Jack put his lips to the unconscious man’s ear and murmured. “Exitus probatur,” he said.

“Ergo acta probantur.” Griffin’s voice was thick and gravelly, but Jack heard him clearly.

He looked up at Cinderhouse and grinned. “Do you know what we have here, Peter?”

Cinderhouse shook his head, thoroughly confused.

“We have another acolyte. Isn’t that wonderful?”

“Is it?”

“Oh, yes,” Jack said. “Very wonderful, indeed. Why is he bleeding? Did you do this to him?”

Cinderhouse took a step back. “He attacked me.” His voice was filled with fear.

“But you got the upper hand, did you?” Jack didn’t wait for the bald man to answer. “Help me here,” he said. “Don’t worry, little fly. Here, get him under the arms, lift him up.”