Eleven
THERE’S A WAY INTO ANY HOUSE. YOU CAN KNOCK on the
door and talk your way in, pleasant-like. You can kick the door
down and tromp in with clubs and a gang at your back. Or you can
crawl on your sly, silent, dusty belly for sixty feet, scrape some
bricks loose, and chew your way in like a rat. Hawker preferred the
sneaking route to open and brutal force, which was why he’d become
a thief instead of joining the army.
The hole they’d gnawed through the wall came out in
an empty hall—Owl was right about that—about six feet up from the
floor. You couldn’t take a hold onto the bricks themselves, getting
down. That was asking for the whole place to fall apart. You had to
jump. Six feet wasn’t what you’d call a long way down, but it was a
long way to drop and land soft as cotton, which was what they had
to do.
He went first, ignoring some gesticulating from
Owl. He didn’t trust either of his cohorts when it came to the fine
points of being quiet. He trusted himself. He hit the floorboards
loose and springy and turned it into a roll and came down at the
end, flat and limp as a doll. He didn’t make any noise.
He was alone in a long corridor with closed doors.
No sound of breathing behind any of them doors, which was what you
might call an indication they were empty, but not a promise you
could take to the bank. Light leaked out of the hole they’d made in
the wall. He braced himself on the plaster wall, making a ladder
for Owl. Letting her put her feet on his shoulders and climb down,
hand and foot, over him. Then Pax did the same thing, only heavier.
Nothing like breaking into a house together for getting to know
somebody.
Owl dressed right—head to foot in black, boy’s
trousers, hair pulled back and braided, covered with a dark scarf,
soft boots. She’d left her woman’s clothes in a bundle outside when
they first came in. She wouldn’t pass as a boy, not close up, not
to a blind man, but she could move fast and easy and nobody cared
how she looked anyway.
Pax brought a lit candle with him and left the
lantern behind in the attic where it’d be useful in the escape.
That was showing a modicum of common sense. Hawker’s old master,
who’d taught him to thieve, used to say, “Always take pains over
your escape route. It’s never wasted.”
The minute she was down, Owl slipped off to the
left, going from door to door, looking in, and leaving everything
open behind her. Bedrooms. Men’s clothing. Lots of books and
papers. They’d have those rooms to hide in and leap from ambush if
they were hunted along this corridor. Pax ghosted off to do the
same down the right side, setting his boots to the floor silent as
philosophy. All of this with no need for a word between any of
them. That was a good sign.
This was a barracks-looking sort of house. No
carpet in the hall. No furniture. No place for a cat to sit. Ten or
twenty framed samplers on the wall. Not like anybody lived here at
all. Not like it was somebody’s home.
The door to the attic turned out to be next-to-last
on the right-hand side. He went straight to it, which was half
figuring out where it must be from long experience in the way
houses were laid out and half luck. He hoped he impressed
everybody.
Owl had worked her way to the head of the stairs
leading down. She stood, breathing slow, getting herself steeled up
for what came next. When she’d done that a minute, she took a
little gun out of the pouch under her shirt.
He trotted down the hall—quiet about it—to
intercept her. She looked mulish, but she stopped.
He held out his hand and she gave him the gun so he
could take a look at it. It was small, but not a toy. A serious
gun, well maintained. A working weapon.
When he gave it back, she held it right—low against
her side, on the half cock, thumb on the hammer. She’d been well
taught. She might last all of a minute and a half in a real
fight.
He mouthed, “Good luck,” and hoped like hell she
wouldn’t need it.
Then he headed for the attic to play his part. He
passed Pax, still searching rooms. Taking the stairs upward was
like climbing into a dark throat. What they had here was—what would
Doyle have called it?—Stygian darkness, whatever the hell that
meant. Funny how his old profession—stealing—and his new
one—spying—both involved a lot of fumbling his way around in the
dark.
The fourth tread squeaked, like he’d stepped on
something that objected. He’d been hugging along next to the wall
just so that wouldn’t happen. It was a shame and pity the way some
householders didn’t fix these little defects in their house.
At the top of the stairs, he ran his hands up and
down the doorframe. The door was not just locked, but barred, like
they were keeping jaguars and highwaymen behind it. A board thick
as his hand was laid across the door in iron holders. Serious
impediments to exit on this door. They were keeping somebody in,
not out.
He put his ear to the wood and there was not a
sound inside, which would ordinarily mean he was about to break
into some furniture storage. In this case, it probably indicated
somebody was going to stab him the minute he nudged the door
open.
He’d had the chance, once, to apprentice to a
fence, him being handy with numbers and knowing a fair amount about
stolen goods. He should probably have pursued that line of
work.
He lifted the bar up. Set it to the side, out of
the way. Next on his list was this padlock. Nice and solid. Cold.
Heavy. Expensive work, by the feel of it. His picks slipped into
his hand with velvet silence since he kept them wrapped up nice and
quiet. There was no feeling in the world sweeter than a fine pair
of lockpicks between the fingers.
Except maybe a girl’s breasts. Maybe the flower
between her legs. That was the sweetest toy in the world. But
lockpicks were a close second.
He shouldn’t be thinking about girls when he was on
a job. Doyle would have said something sarcastic and made him feel
like a fool.
He saw Pax before he heard him, since Pax was
bringing the candle and he made about as much noise as the ghost of
a mouse. Pax didn’t creak on that fourth step. Then he stood, not
flapping his mouth, holding the light at a useful angle.
Hawker’d admit it—Pax knew what he was doing.
Didn’t make him one wad of spit more likable.
The tumblers scraped. The lock clicked free. Pax
cupped his palm around the candle flame so it wouldn’t blow out if
they encountered any breeze in the course of their next
activities.
The door swung out smoothly, showing a tight,
narrow room with no lights inside.
A pack of kids stood together at the far side of
the room. They were dressed in short, white nightshirts—the same
for girls and boys. Counting quick, he summed it up as thirteen of
them. The girl with blond braids, the one he’d seen fighting
yesterday, was in front. On her right, a boy the same size. Pink
and blond for the girl. Really beautiful. Brown and
wholesome-looking for the boy.
Still as doorsteps, every one of them.
So far, so good. “We’re friends,” he whispered.
“Give me a minute to talk . . .” before you start
yelling.
This wasn’t much of a room for a baker’s dozen of
kids to sleep in. Slanted ceiling. The only place you could stand
up was in the middle. The little window at the end had no
reflection in it. No glass. Just a hole in the wall with iron bars
across it. Too small to crawl out of even if you were a skinny
kid.
No beds. No furniture. No dressers. Blankets were
parceled out in two rows, one on each side of the attic, on the
floor. That was how they slept. One blanket under them. One over.
No pillow. No padding. No sheet. Clothes stacked in a neat pile
next each blanket, a pair of shoes set square beside it.
It was hotter in here than outside. He knew all
about attic rooms like this. Roast in summer. Freeze in
winter.
The bedrooms he’d seen downstairs were comfortable
enough.
The kids’ faces and bodies were honed down into
hungry angles. Not a plump one in the lot. And they were locked in.
He felt Pax behind him, being silent.
The blond girl said, “Who are you? What do you
want?”
She was the leader then. It showed in the way the
others kept an eye on her and ranged themselves out from a center,
where she was. Street thieves in the St. Giles rookeries traveled
in mean, dangerous little packs that acted like this. They were run
by girls, often as not.
He said, “I want to get you out of here.”
“Why?” One blunt word from the boy at the
front.
“Does it matter?”
None of them blinked. Absorbed attention was the
order of the day.
He said, “Have they told you Robespierre is
dead?”
“We were told.”
“Then you know everything’s changed. This Coach
House of yours . . .” He didn’t spit on the floor. Doyle said
gentlemen didn’t spit. That left him not knowing how to express his
feelings with the eloquence they deserved. “This place. It’s done.
Finished. Over. You’re the last.” He took a step into the room. He
saw the girl think about attacking him and decide to put that off
for the moment.
He said, “This is what they didn’t tell you.
There’s no place for you in England. Nothing’s prepared. There’s no
one left to set you up. You won’t be put in families or schools.
You’ll go to brothels.”
The girl remained cold-eyed. “Why do you concern
yourself?”
Damned if he knew. But Doyle would do this. Maybe
this was what a gentleman would do. “Stay, or get yourselves out of
this kennel. You have three minutes to decide.”
“They’re testing us,” a boy said. Another
nodded.
“It is the British.”
“They will cut our throats,” a girl said in a sweet
voice.
The blond girl said, “We serve France. We will do
whatever we are called upon to do.”
“We are loyal to the Revolution,” the boy beside
her said. The others murmured about loyalty and revolutionary
ideals and steadfastness.
He didn’t have an endless supply of time.
Light slid in and out of corners of the attic room.
The faces of the Cachés shadowed and unshadowed. Pax came up beside
him. He said, “Is somebody downstairs?”
There was no noise at all. No light coming up the
staircase. That was just Pax being nervous.
He turned in time to see Pax change the candle from
left hand to right. “It is the least of my worries,” Pax stretched
and closed his fingers, uncramping them, and looked from one Caché
to the other, “whether you believe me or not.” He could have been
talking about the cost of radishes for all the emotion in his
voice. “Take what we offer, or stay and accept what will be done
with you.” Pax looked from one face to the other. “This is no test.
No trickery.”
A dozen seconds ticked off. The girl in long braids
said, “We are not cowards. It is the moment to stop pretending that
we are.” She swept around, full of authority, wearing a nightshirt
with dignity. “Choose. Remain here or come. If you’re coming,
dress. Carry your shoes.”
Not everyone decided to leave. He and Pax argued
with them for a while, but three stayed behind.