Page 16 of Dearly, Beloved


  “Missing it?” I had to conclude. He nodded. “Well, I’ve brought the man you need to see.” I used a hand to guide him between his shoulders, pointing out Samedi, who recovered himself and beckoned the boy over. I tried to send Sam a look that read Work fast.

  “I knew you wouldn’t forget!” Laura curtsied to Nora and the others, smiling widely. “I sent you a note. I copied it from the broadsides everyone else made.”

  “This is Laura,” I said, before addressing her directly. “That’s all well and good, but … what is this place?”

  “Our new home.” She joined her hands together. “I like living in the open. New London kills everything.”

  “But I thought you guys were a pro-zombie group?”

  “We are! Pro-zombie and pro-living!”

  “Is that the reason for the party, then?”

  “Oh, this is how we’re going to make money to help the dead. Though some of our brothers and sisters are still going to the city every day. The trinket hawkers and beggars. They bring people back with them.” Laura spun around. “Because now we can hold big parties! It’s just starting, and look how many people are already here, giving money to the performers. Word’s spreading fast. No one has to do anything wrong anymore! No more stealing, no more fighting!”

  I tried to pick apart her words, but Beryl beat me to it. “You’re a gang? A guild?” Samedi looked up from his inspection of Dog’s unbound arm, his eyes filling with alarm.

  Laura nodded innocently and moved closer to Dog. “They used to call us the Grave House Gang. But I like the Changed much better.”

  “I take it back,” Renfield said. “Grand theft auto is apparently completely plausible. You’d think I’d learn.”

  I cursed inwardly. Before anything else, I had to get Nora out of there.

  “You.”

  The drums built up again as I turned around to find the zombie known as Maria Hagens, formerly of Company Z, standing behind us. “Hagens!” I said, smiling slightly in spite of everything. “Haven’t seen you in months.”

  “Hey! Good to see you made it out,” Tom offered.

  Laura’s eyes went wide, and at once her ebullient mood disappeared. “Come on, Dog.” Samedi looked at her in confusion as she stepped in to take him, and she added, “I’m sorry, sir.”

  “Don’t talk to him, Laura,” Hagens snapped. “He’s not one of us!” Laura cowered away from Hagens, working furiously with Dog’s bandages.

  Shock momentarily managed to convince me I hadn’t heard right. “What do you mean, not one of you? We were all in Z-Comp together!” I indicated my friends with an open hand.

  The bony woman’s cracked lips curled back in a sneer. “You’ll know soon enough. On that note, how’re you and that little piece of meat getting along? What was her name? Nora?”

  Anger started to sting my lips and cheeks—my skin trying to flush. Another clap of thunder rang out, as if the atmosphere itself sympathized. “Meat?”

  “I’m right here.” Nora stepped forward, her eyes narrowing. I reached out and pulled her back against me by her shawl. “Want a taste? I could put my fist in your mouth.”

  “Don’t tempt me,” Hagens said. “I owe Dr. Dearly a debt for finding me and keeping me going, and this is my payment. You better run to ground now, you hear me? Actually, that goes for all of you. You better watch your backs!”

  “You …” Nora didn’t even have to use a foul insult—her tone said it all. She tossed down her basket and advanced on Hagens again, but I caught her by her elbows, my body going rigid with anger.

  “You don’t talk to her like that,” I said, careful to speak slowly and loudly. “Ever. What the hell’s wrong with you, Hagens?”

  Hagens turned to me, eyes burning with rage. “What’s wrong with me? What’s wrong with you? How dare you show your face here?”

  “What are you talking about?”

  Hagens’s body tightened, her voice rising in a scream. “Don’t act as if you don’t know! As far as I’m concerned, Griswold, you abandoned us on the docks the night of the Siege. You left half of us to die, and marched the other half off to hell to save that piece of meat’s father!”

  “Left you to die?” My voice was twisted by a growl. “What are you talking about? Colonel Lopez gave you all an out!”

  “An out?” Hagens took a step toward me. “Is that what you call it? Is that what you call nearly having to crawl on your hands and knees through the city after the people you’ve been trying to protect turn on you, praying someone doesn’t blow your brains out?”

  “I took as many men as I could, and Lopez didn’t have to encourage the rest of you to go anywhere. He saved lives that night. He gave Company Z a chance, even if he had to relay the extermination order in the end!”

  “His men hunted us down like dogs!” Hagens’s voice was always strident and tough, but when she yelled, she sounded like an angry man rather than a woman. “No. I owe you nothing. I’m the one protecting my people. It’s out of the kindness of my rotting heart that I’m telling you you’re not welcome here!”

  “Chas and I woke up in a desert strewn with the remains of our friends because of Wolfe and the extermination order, and you think I somehow got out of dealing with it?” The words were out before I could stop them, and to no avail. Hagens continued to glare at me; my friends stared at me with pity. Pity I didn’t want.

  “You tell me,” Hagens said. “We were both betrayed. Which one of us is still working alongside them?”

  As the first few drops of rain fell, Laura rallied. “Mártira said all Changed are welcome—”

  “Not this one!” Hagens shouted, rounding on her. “Never! I have no real scrap with the others, but Bram Griswold is not Changed. He’s a living man in a corpse. And he plays by living men’s rules!”

  The first sparks of a deep, blistering anger started popping in my stomach upon hearing those words. My entire unlife was an exercise in control, but Hagens was pushing buttons that ought not be pushed. I felt myself take a step toward her, even as my higher brain processes told me to back down. That it wasn’t worth the risk.

  “Bram.” Samedi moved in front of her, his eyes boring into mine. “Let’s go. Come on. We have a lot of things to figure out, but not here.”

  “Look at him. He won’t even fight me,” Hagens said scornfully.

  “Miss Hagens,” Dr. Chase said as she moved to usher Renfield and Chas forward. “Do shut up. And everyone check your pockets again.”

  “Did a human say something?” Hagens challenged. “Because I thought I heard a human say something. Oh well, couldn’t have been important.”

  Dr. Chase’s look of hurt caught me before I could do something I’d regret—because I knew precisely how she felt. Forcing myself to confront my impulses, to take the right path, I spread my arms out, capturing Nora’s arm and Tom’s elbow. Marching them forward, I trained my eyes on the parking lot, my ears on the rustling grass. This was a mistake. The whole damn day’d been a mistake. We just had to get somewhere safe, and get on task. In control. Figure out a new plan for helping Dog.

  Resolute as always, Hagens called after us, “Keep away from here! If fortune favors you, I’ll never see you again! Because if I do … well. We’re not on the same side! Not any longer!”

  On the walk home from church, Isambard told jokes. Mom laughed louder and louder at each one, as if Issy were scaling new heights of hilarity the longer he went on. Dad cracked a smile. It was a rare, hoped-for moment.

  And I couldn’t enjoy it.

  Strolling along with my family, I turned my face up to the sun and let my jacket slip slightly off of my shoulders. I didn’t care if it looked shameful or stupid. I was tired of being ignored, sidelined. Did I just somehow look unimportant? Did something in my eyes, my face say, She doesn’t know what she’s talking about. Don’t listen to her.

  It wasn’t Nora wandering off that truly upset me, although that was part of it. I’d run off myself, many times—to help her, Mr.
Coughlin, Vespertine, Jenny—so I had no room to judge her there. I could even admire her for it. And it wasn’t that I didn’t want to help people, I just …

  God, when was it going to get easier? I knew I wasn’t thinking straight, but it was getting harder to do so. When was someone going to pick me as their foremost concern for a change? When was I going to be able to stop thinking in terms of saving or guarding the people around me? Not that I’d ever choose to, but when would I again have the option to stop?

  And how long was she going to keep picking Mr. Griswold over me?

  “Pamela.” I looked at my mother. “Wear your jacket properly, sweetheart.”

  Taking a breath, I shrugged it up. “Of course.”

  Mom wouldn’t allow me to help with Sunday dinner. Upon being chased out of the kitchen, I lingered in the hallway, thinking that perhaps I ought to find Dad and tell him about it—but then sounds started to echo from the kitchen that offered me a deep, ineffable sense of comfort. A knife being sharpened, the pop of a jar lid. From the parlor came the sound of Isambard and Jenny playing. Jenny said something, and Dad laughed.

  In the interests of preserving the moment, I did nothing.

  Instead I chose to distract myself by working on the laundry. There was no guarantee that Lopez would come, after all, and I didn’t feel like sitting on my hands. The laundry room was in the cellar, right next door to the bakery kitchen; both had white-tiled walls and floors. The smells of yeast and flaked white soap brought back ten thousand childhood memories—good ones. After a while I found myself humming as I starched and ironed a small glacier of handkerchiefs. We went through so many of them now.

  Soon I came upon Lopez’s. I had to return it to him somehow, even if he didn’t come to call on us. To keep Michael’s hankie had seemed romantic and intimate; I didn’t want Lopez to think I entertained the same notions about his. Not that he probably would. I’d never gotten a creepy vibe from him. But I wanted to avoid any hint of impropriety—more than that, any reminder of Allister. I’d already burned his.

  Something struck me as I unfolded his handkerchief from the pile, though. After a moment I started cursing myself for not having seen it before. His monogram was embroidered in faint, dignified gray—E.N.L.—but a narrow black border lined the edge. He was in mourning. Maybe he’d lost someone during the Siege. Poor man.

  Just then I heard the doorbell ring, the squeak of footsteps. As useless as it was, I stopped and looked at the ceiling. “Good afternoon,” a deep voice said as the door opened. “Would your parents happen to be in?”

  “It is you!” Isambard exclaimed. “Come in, Lord Lopez.”

  This was it.

  Hurriedly I ironed and folded Lopez’s handkerchief, before turning my eyes to the rows of empty, cocoonlike clothing suspended from the ceiling beams. Among them I found my blue lawn, which at least was good enough to be seen in at St. Cyprian’s. For a moment I contemplated changing into it in the middle of the basement. I was currently wearing an old chintz dress with cheap, scratchy lace at the neck and sleeves and a small patch on the back—my work clothes. I’d changed into them after church. And last time I’d felt so out of place, so dowdy, so … well, the way Cyprian’s had taught me to feel.

  Something ultimately stopped me from reaching for the dress, though. It was the memory of my mother forcing me to “read” innocently in the parlor when we knew full well Michael was outside, preparing to call. Forcing herself to embroider in her rocking chair while he was there—my mother, the hard worker, the bootstrap-puller. Just so we’d resemble his idea of “normal,” of “respectable.”

  Bile rose in my throat. I would never do that again. Never let her do that again. Not for a lord, not for anybody.

  In the end I just shook out my long braids and pulled my hair back into an impromptu bun, sleeking down the strands behind my ears with water from the washer. Then, taking a breath, I began my climb. “I hope I’m not interrupting anything,” Lopez was saying. “I thought Sunday might be the best day to catch all of you at home.”

  “Not at all! I’m not sure where my daughter’s run off to,” Dad replied. “But please, let me take your coat and hat, my lord.”

  “Thank you. And please, Lopez alone will do.”

  “Are you sure?” My father seemed confused.

  “Very sure. Feel free to consider it an eccentricity.”

  I came up behind them from the basement entrance, Lord Lopez’s handkerchief pressed protectively between my hands. “Lopez!” I exclaimed, doing my best to sound as if I’d been ignorant of his arrival. “How nice to see you.”

  The man turned to regard me, his expression thankful. “Miss Roe.” He bowed. He was dressed all in black again, but subtle little differences convinced me his current suit was different from the one I’d seen him in before. The lapels were of black velvet, and his cravat was tinseled with silver thread.

  “May I officially present my daughter,” my father said. “Although I’ll refrain from indulging in the three-ring name circus, if you don’t mind, seeing as you two already know each other.”

  After curtsying, I walked forward and offered him his handkerchief. It was the perfect time to do it, with my parents watching. “I was just about to put this someplace safe. Thank you for letting me borrow it.”

  Lopez accepted it and tucked it away. “My pleasure.” My mother smiled at me approvingly.

  “Please, join us in the parlor.” My father ushered everyone forward. “Is the tea ready, dear?”

  “Very nearly.” Mom saw herself out.

  Dad shut the screen off with the remote control as soon as he entered. Isambard was already inside, holding Jenny by the hand. My father clapped a hand on Issy’s shoulder and said to Lopez, “And this is my son, Isambard. I believe that last time you saw him he was … alive.”

  Issy bowed stiffly to Lopez. “I owe you my thanks, my lord.”

  “Think nothing of it. I’m glad to see you looking so well, young man.” Lopez looked down at Jenny, who was staring up at him, her eyes like two headlights. “And who is this little lady?”

  “Jenny Delgado, one of our neighbors.”

  Lopez inclined his head at her. “Hello, Miss Delgado.”

  Issy squeezed Jenny’s hand, whispering, “Curtsy.”

  Jenny did no such thing. Instead she pointed at Lopez’s face and pronounced, “You’re wearing a caterpillar!”

  Lopez straightened up, his hand moving to his moustache. After a protracted second, he chuckled. “Is it that bad? I have been away from civilization for quite some time.”

  Laughing, I moved to pick Jenny up, relieving Isambard of his duties for a while. “Come on, Jenny-bear. Let’s find your crayons.”

  I took her to the corner by the fireplace, where she had a tin pail of crayon stubs and a long roll of butcher paper to draw on. As I tore off a piece for her, Lopez took a seat on our satin sofa, glancing curiously about our poky parlor. I felt another stab of embarrassment, despite the fact that my mother had polished it obsessively upon learning that a lord might call on her—but a split second later he caught my eye and smiled kindly, and I found my embarrassment dissolving. Outside, it began to rain.

  “We all owe you so much,” Dad said as he sat down in his usual chair. Isambard sat in Mother’s rocking chair for the time being. “My daughter told us what happened that night, but I’m afraid it still seems rather surreal. I never thought of attempting to locate you, to thank you, and that is a mark against me. Thank goodness you ran into her again.”

  “Your thanks are happily accepted, but not necessary,” Lopez said, addressing my father, his expression growing serious. “If I have performed my duty, that is enough. And I can only apologize for my repeated run-ins with Miss Roe without your knowledge.”

  Dad shook his head. “No, no, never mention it again.” Upon hearing this, Lopez seemed to relax a little.

  Mother came in with the best tea service then, and set it down on the table. “My daughter said you?
??re no longer with the army? Forgive my curiosity.”

  “No. I was relieved at the pleasure of the government, following the death of my elder brother, Lord Atticus Lopez.”

  “I’m so sorry,” Mother said, regret washing across her plump features. “Did he … was he infected?”

  “No, though he did pass away during the troubles in December.” Lopez set his hands in his lap. “It’s not a story for little ears, I’m afraid. Nor do I derive much enjoyment from its telling.”

  “Of course.” Mom started pouring. As she did, Isambard sent me a frantic look that told me how badly he wanted to get in on the conversation. Even in death his age prevented him from speaking unless spoken to. Mine did, too. It must have seemed terribly unfair to Issy—he could never actually grow up and reach the stage where he could speak with other men as a man in his own right. The fact that he wasn’t arguing against this very thing, fighting for a reevaluation of his social prospects, told me just how much death had changed him. The old Issy would have clawed his way up the social ladder tooth and nail.

  I wasn’t sure whether to be proud of him or utterly devastated.

  “I’ve been renting in the city since his funeral,” Lopez volunteered. Accepting a cup of tea, he joked, his tone dull, “You must correct me, madam, if I make any etiquette mistakes. I’m sure fifteen years in the army have taken their toll. You’ve obviously raised two wonderful children, and I’m sure I could benefit from your instruction.”

  Mom smiled at him, and her smile struck me as being from another time, another place. It was a smile born of true sympathy, of pleasure at another’s kindness. I only had a few moments to enjoy it before Jenny tugged on my sleeve, calling my attention back to her. I helped her to hold her crayons as she worked.

  The adults went on to speak in soft tones of many nontopics—the weather, the prices of things since the Siege, everything but the actual violence and events thereof. I listened compulsively, anxious that Lopez might still give me up, tell them about the real circumstances of our second meeting—but he never did. In fact, there was something calming in his demeanor, something about the way he phrased his statements that made them seem fair and just. It put me at ease. As he and my parents chatted, I could see it was having an effect on them, too. They joked a little. Their postures softened.