I did suspect people would start to die.
No blood, no marks. But dead blue eyes open and fixed on something, or someone. A woman who would let her great-nephew die to keep the secret of the last contract, and who’d probably have let Robin do the same without more than gentle regret. Edwin didn’t think for a moment that Flora Sutton’s death was due to natural causes. And she’d been expecting it, he realised with a start, unable to look away from that smile. Ever since Reggie visited and took the contract—part of the contract—away with him.
Reggie hadn’t taken the danger with him at all. Or if he had, Robin and Edwin had brought it right back.
All that keen-eyed intellectual passion, all her knowledge of old and natural magics, snuffed in an instant. Angry sorrow welled in Edwin. What a damned waste.
“We shall have to wait and see what Dr. Hayman says,” said the butler. “In the meantime, if you gentlemen—”
“There’s something in her hand,” said Robin. He knelt on the rug. His hand hovered above her clenched one, then touched the wax-white skin with a gentleness that made tears seize abrupt and unexpected in the back of Edwin’s nose. “May I . . .?”
Nobody said anything. Edwin moved closer; something was, indeed, peeking from the side of her clenched fingers. Robin turned the dead woman’s hand over and prised the fingers open, one by one. Then he snatched back his fingers as if they’d been burned, and shook them hastily.
Mrs. Sutton had died with a handful of silver. It was a necklace, the chain of it all looped and held secure beneath the pendant, which was a circular shape about the size of a half crown, with neat folds and blackened patterning.
“A rose,” Robin said.
“Ah, yes. It’s—an heirloom,” said Mrs. Greengage. Too loudly, and too quickly. She swept forward and bent to take the pendant. She, too, snatched back her fingers with a startled noise as soon as they came into contact with it.
Edwin lifted his hands to try another detection charm, in case that would provide any clues. There was no telling what kind of imbuement Mrs. Sutton might have laid on an object she was clutching at the time of her death. Then he remembered that he’d lost his cradling string, and that even if he managed to do without it in situations that weren’t driven by fear of death, he’d used up his magic. It would be hours yet before he could manage another spell.
Well, touching the rose didn’t seem to have caused harm. Just discomfort. And to magician and non-magician alike. Curious. Edwin considered asking them what they’d felt, but didn’t want his own observations tainted by what they said. They could compare notes afterwards.
Taking a deep breath, Edwin reached out.
“Edwin—” Robin started.
Edwin’s fingers made contact. His arm was tensed, ready to draw back, but . . . nothing happened.
No, that wasn’t right. Something was happening. The silver rose was warming beneath Edwin’s touch, and not just warming, but vibrating. A soft, subtle hum like the fall of horses’ hooves far down a road. He lifted the pendant clear and closed his fingers on it, letting the chain dangle, the hot buzz shivering right down to the bones of his hand. The sensation became jerky, as though it were trying to push itself in a particular direction.
“What’s it doing?” asked Robin.
Edwin snuck a look at Mrs. Greengage, whose expression had solidified into something between hostile and hopeful. She didn’t look like a likely source of information.
“I’m not sure,” Edwin said. “It feels like—there’s a hiding game, like this. It’s an easy charm. Hot and cold. Hotter is closer.” It didn’t explain why the charm hadn’t wanted anyone else to pick the pendant up, but Edwin wasn’t going to put it past a single item on this entire damned estate to be capricious at best, given its mistress.
He moved around the room with arm outstretched, letting the rose heat and cool and buzz more and less demandingly in his grasp. Soon enough it was obvious where it wanted to lead him: a tall mirror hung on one of the ivy-carved wood panels of the wall, large enough to show Edwin himself from hair to boots. He was mussed and scratched all over, unkempt as a boy come from climbing trees. The mirror’s frame was made of the same silver, and with the same design of roses, impeccably polished. There was no obvious place to put the pendant, no convenient empty space in the pattern where it could be nestled.
Edwin thought first of the stopped clocks. There was no mist on this mirror, at least. Then he thought of the illusion mirror that led to the back of Len Geiger’s shop, and reached out the hand containing the rose to touch the glass surface. His cheeks glowed with warmth like sunburn as his fingers brushed it, and for a moment there was something odd, something different, about his reflection.