Read The Inquisitor's Apprentice Online

Authors: Chris Moriarty

The Inquisitor's Apprentice (22 page)

Wolf leaned forward intently.

"Oh, yes. My husband was murdered, all right. He was murdered two days before he committed suicide."

"Are you
sure?
"

"I'm his wife. You think I wouldn't know the difference?" She shuddered. "What was that thing, anyway?"

"A dybbuk. Or something very like one. Is it possible that your husband's machine could have been used to manufacture it?"

Lily gasped. But Mrs. Worley just laughed. "Wherever did you get such a ridiculous idea?"

"Is it so ridiculous?"

"Of course! I've read all the newspaper articles about Edison's etherograph over and over again. It's just my husband's machine dressed up with some new bells and whistles. It's a harmless toy. This idea of theirs about fingerprinting magical criminals is quite distasteful, of course. But manufacturing dybbuks? No, Inquisitor. I know the machine inside and out, and that's quite impossible."

"Perhaps Edison added some other component—"

"There's nothing you could add that could change it into what you're describing. Look, I'll show you how it works if you don't believe me." She smiled at Wolf's apprehensive expression. "I assure you, it's perfectly safe."

Wolf sat down stoically in the chair she offered him, stretching out his long legs as if he expected to be a while. Mrs. Worley flicked a few switches. The machine hummed to life. The spindle turned, and the wax cylinder began to spin. And then ... nothing. The needle hovered without descending. The fluted trumpet speaker was silent. As far as Worley's machine was concerned, Wolf's chair could have been empty.

"There's a problem," Wolf said.

"Yes. But it's not with the machine. It's with you. I think it has to do with having magical powers." She bit her tongue, obviously worried she had offended him. "Not that I mean to be impertinent, Mr. Wolf. But you being an Inquisitor, well, one naturally assumes..."

"You think I'm resisting the device."

"It's probably something Inquisitors learn to do naturally, dealing with magical criminals the way you do. But if you can just ... well ... let it happen?"

Wolf leaned back in his chair. "Mrs. Worley, I surrender myself to you entirely."

She started the machine up again. This time Wolf seemed to be listening intently for some sound no one else could hear. He must have heard it because after a moment he smiled and blinked in surprise. And then he laughed softly to himself and opened his hands in the same quick gesture with which he had freed the grounded swallow.

In that instant the needle sprang to life, and the Soul Catcher began to play the same unearthly music they'd heard in Morgaunt's library.

But where that song had been excruciating, this one was ... riveting. It was impossible to stop listening, just like it was impossible to stop staring when you rode the Elevated right past people's living room windows. Suddenly Sacha knew things about Wolf that he never would have guessed at ... things he really didn't have any right to know. He felt embarrassed, like he'd been caught stealing something.

"There," Mrs. Worley said at last, switching the machine off. "Harmless, see?"

"But rather unnerving." Wolf swiped the back of his sleeve across his brow. He looked pale and clammy and even more disheveled than usual.

"That's just because of your being—you know. Ordinary people actually find it rather pleasant. Just as they enjoy admiring themselves in a mirror or looking at old photographs. Vanity, I suppose. But, as I said, quite harmless."

"And that's it?" Wolf asked.

"That's it." Mrs. Worley pulled the little gold and white cylinder out of the machine. "If Edison has made the machine into anything more than a parlor toy, then he's invented something new, and I wouldn't know enough to help you. Would you like your recording, though?" she asked when she noticed that Wolf was still frowning at it. "As a souvenir?"

"Thank you," Wolf said gravely. He took the cylinder and slipped it into his pocket.

Wolf seemed to recover his composure rapidly after that. He decided he wanted to see the machine in action again, and when Lily volunteered to sit for it, he didn't argue. Worley's machine had no trouble recording Lily, though the tune it played back was sweet and wistful and disarmingly un-Lily-like. Sacha gazed at her, searching her face for a hint of this hidden gentleness.

"What are
you
looking at?" she snapped.

"Nothing!" What on earth had he been thinking? Lily Astral wasn't sweet or sad or gentle. And if Worley's ridiculous machine made her sound that way, then what better proof did you need that it was all a load of hooey?

"And anyway," Lily prodded, "it's your turn now, isn't it?"

"Oh, I don't think I really—" Sacha began.

But then he noticed that Wolf had suddenly gone all vague and bland and absentminded. Wolf wanted him to do this. And resisting would only make Wolf start wondering about the very things Sacha least wanted him to think about.

"Sure," he said, trying to sound nonchalant.

He sat down. The chair seemed to creak unnaturally loudly under his weight. Mrs. Worley turned the machine back on. It whirred and clicked for what seemed like an eternity. The cylinder spun. The needle hovered, and...

"That's odd," Mrs. Worley said.

Wolf leaned over her shoulder. "Is he doing the same thing I did?"

"No. And the machine's working perfectly. You saw how well it recorded Miss Astral just now. It's just—well—it's almost as if—"

"Almost as if what?"

"As if there's nothing there to record."

Sacha stared at Mrs. Worley, trying to comprehend her words. He felt numb. He tried to work out what she meant, but all the ideas that occurred to him were so horrifying that he flinched away from them before the thoughts even had a chance to form in his mind.

"Sacha?"

Sacha jumped. How many times had Wolf said his name before he noticed?

"Sacha? Are you all right?"

He looked into Wolf's eyes and saw a depth of sympathy there that he would never have imagined possible if he hadn't just heard the man's soul turned into music.

He had a swift, startlingly vivid image of Wolf snatching him out of danger and throwing him up to safety just as he'd done for the grounded swallow. For one dizzying moment, he thought of confessing everything. Then he thought of Morgaunt's laughing threats and the towering walls of Sing Sing and the sinister Semitic face of the Kabbalist in Edison's etherograph ads. Wolf was a good man, but he was still an Inquisitor. Telling him wouldn't solve Sacha's problems. It would only hurt the people Sacha loved.

"I'm fine," he lied.

 

Sacha had no idea how he made it back outside without being sick to his stomach. He could see Wolf and Lily staring at him. He could see the questions and doubts and suspicions swirling behind Wolf's eyes. But it felt like he was stuck at the bottom of a well and they were much too far away to reach him.

Wolf ushered the two children into the cab, muttering something about having to apologize to their mothers for keeping them out so late. Sacha looked longingly down the Bowery toward Hester Street, only a few short blocks away. But he was trapped in his lie, and there was nothing he could do about it.

He was cold and weary and footsore by the time he finally turned onto Hester Street. To his relief, everything looked normal. The street was quiet at this time of night, but there were still scattered signs of life on the front stoops and fire escapes. Sacha slowed his pace a little, figuring that now he could take the time to catch his breath before he went inside.

And then he felt it. That same swirling, sinking motion he'd sensed in Morgaunt's library, when he'd felt like all the magic in New York was spiraling down into Morgaunt's golden glass of Scotch. Only now there seemed to be no center to the whirlpool. Just the bleak, aimless, drifting rattle of dead leaves scattering before a storm.

To Sacha's ordinary sight, the street still looked the same as always. But now the men lounging on the front stoops and the women gossiping on the fire escapes seemed to be part of a separate world, as if he were looking up at them through deep water. And in the silent underwater world that Sacha was trapped in, there was another presence—one that was at once mysterious and frighteningly familiar.

He turned to face the shadow that he already knew he would see behind him.

The watcher stopped when he stopped, and they stood staring at each other across the littered cobblestones.

"Who are you?" Sacha called out. "What do you want from me?"

A faint breeze whispered down the street, lifting the hanging laundry only to let it drop back limply the next moment. It seemed to Sacha that the breeze also stirred the watcher's hair and clothes. But the watcher himself never moved.

"Don't you have anything to say for yourself?" Sacha taunted. He took a step forward.

For a moment the watcher seemed to hesitate. Then it stepped forward too. Just one step. Just enough to let the smoky halo of the street lamp light its face.

Its eyes were black pits—dark pools of shadow in a face already cloaked in shadow. But even in the flickering gaslight, Sacha could see that the dybbuk was no longer the disembodied wraith that it had been when it first began following him. He could see it clearly now. He'd racked his memory for weeks trying to put a name to that face, trying to understand why it seemed so hauntingly familiar. He'd compared it to every face in his family, every face in his neighborhood. But there was one face he hadn't thought of ... one face he knew better than any other...

He broke and ran, sprinting for home across the slick cobblestones. But the dybbuk was faster than he was. Or rather—and this thought made his heart stutter in terror—it was exactly as fast as he was.

He stumbled and almost lost his footing. Now the dybbuk was so close that he could hear its breath behind him.

Then, just as he was sure the creature was upon him, Sacha felt a ripple run through the very bricks of the city, as if it were a pond and some unseen hand had cast a stone into it. An instant later, he heard the most beautiful sound of his life: the silvery jingle of
streganonna
bells on a horse's bridle.

He knew, somehow, that it would be the Rag and Bone Man who rounded the corner. He jumped up onto the broken-down cart and peered anxiously over his shoulder as the Rag and Bone Man flicked the reins and his ancient horse shambled forward.

"Did—did you see that?" he asked.

The Rag and Bone Man gave a single nod of his grizzled head, but he kept just as silent as ever.

Sacha glanced sideways at him. Who was he really? Why was there a file on him in Inquisitor Wolf's office? And what would Sacha see if he ever worked up the nerve to sneak a peek inside it?

The Rag and Bone Man pulled up to Sacha's building, and Sacha scrambled down and took the cast-iron steps two at a time, desperate to get inside before his rescuer left. He raced up the tenement stairs toward the warmth and light and life of home.

He slipped through the Lehrers' room, trying not to wake them. He bolted down the dinner his mother had left out for him, reassured her that he was safe and sound and hadn't caught pneumonia, and got into bed, exhausted.

He was fine, he told himself, hoping to stave off the nightmares. The Rag and Bone Man had saved him. Again.

But he knew that the Rag and Bone Man hadn't really saved him. He had only delayed the inevitable.

 

CHAPTER TWENTY
The Path of No Action

F
OR THE NEXT
few weeks, the Edison investigation seemed to go completely cold. If Wolf was still working on the case—and Sacha caught just enough snatches of eavesdropped conversation between Wolf and Payton to be pretty sure that Wolf
was
still working on it—he didn't tell his apprentices about it.

Instead, he let them tag along on his other cases. And he had lots of them. Sacha and Lily watched Wolf solve cases of magical insurance fraud, magical embezzlement, magical blackmail ... and one unnerving murder where a respectable businessman apparently died of a heart attack but turned out to have been done in by means of a nasty little spell that made its victims' blood boil in their veins.

Gradually Sacha began to see the method behind Wolf's famously eccentric inquisitorial technique. He learned to respect Wolf's silences and to wait for the astonishing leaps of logic that would often follow them. He came to recognize the vague, unfocused gaze that meant Wolf was scouring a crime scene for the one thing that didn't fit, the one loose thread that he could tug on to unravel the most subtly woven conspiracy.

Sacha began to despair of ever becoming the kind of Inquisitor that Wolf was. He just didn't have the talent, he told himself. And the one talent he did have was starting to seem completely useless. After all, what good was being able to see magic when the Inquisitors were never called to the scene of a crime until the magic was played out and the criminals long gone? Even Lily's bulldog tenacity seemed more useful for a real life Inquisitor than Sacha's strange second sight.

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