The Changeling Murders (The Thief Taker Series Book 4)

Home > Other > The Changeling Murders (The Thief Taker Series Book 4) > Page 1
The Changeling Murders (The Thief Taker Series Book 4) Page 1

by C. S. Quinn




  ALSO BY C.S. QUINN

  The Thief Taker Series

  The Thief Taker

  Fire Catcher

  Dark Stars

  Death Magic (Short Story)

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2018 by C.S. Quinn

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by Thomas & Mercer, Seattle

  www.apub.com

  Amazon, the Amazon logo, and Thomas & Mercer are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.

  ISBN-13: 9781477805114

  ISBN-10: 1477805117

  Cover design by Lisa Horton

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Chapter 84

  Chapter 85

  Chapter 86

  Chapter 87

  Chapter 88

  Chapter 89

  Chapter 90

  Chapter 91

  Chapter 92

  Chapter 93

  Chapter 94

  Chapter 95

  Chapter 96

  Chapter 97

  Chapter 98

  Chapter 99

  Chapter 100

  Chapter 101

  Chapter 102

  Chapter 103

  Chapter 104

  Chapter 105

  Chapter 106

  Chapter 107

  Chapter 108

  About the Author

  Prologue

  It was an inauspicious day for a wedding. Dark clouds had gathered as Maria tightened the ribbons on her blue dress. She’d begged and borrowed pieces of lace and silk, tucked flowers into her long blonde hair and curled the front into fashionable ringlets. But she still didn’t feel ready.

  Maria could hear the church bells ringing the hour across London. She was late for her own wedding, she realised with a sliding sense of panic. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d been late for anything.

  Be honest, whispered a snake voice in her head. Your heart is still with Charlie Tuesday.

  A hackney carriage drew up outside, large metal wheels striking loudly on the cobbles. Maria watched from the window of her rented room. She frowned in confusion as the driver emerged and knocked on her door.

  The man was dressed strangely. Courtly clothes, old-fashioned and moth-eaten. Unease swirled in Maria’s stomach. ‘I didn’t send for a carriage,’ she said as she opened the door.

  ‘It looks to rain,’ he said in a clipped voice. ‘Your betrothed thought it best you were driven to church.’

  Maria eyed the carriage behind him. It was small, black and slightly scruffy. The kind of modest vehicle that ferried middling sorts about the city. It had large wheels, one horse and space for two people. A considerate yet frugal expense from a lawyer to his wife-to-be on her wedding morning. Exactly like Percy. So why did she feel so apprehensive?

  The driver smiled in a way that didn’t reach his unusual blue-green eyes. ‘I have no other passengers inside,’ he said. ‘You have it to yourself.’

  For some reason, this filled Maria with fear. She swallowed, trying to pull herself together. Every bride feels anxious on her wedding day, she told herself.

  She glanced up at the sky. She’d been looking forward to the walk, to collect her thoughts in the green of Lincoln’s Inn Fields on the way to St Dunstan’s Church. But she couldn’t very well refuse the gesture. It was so thoughtful of Percy.

  Maria stepped towards the carriage, ignoring the sense that something wasn’t right. The driver opened the small door to the black space beyond. You mustn’t keep Percy waiting, Maria thought.

  She ducked through the opening. The dark interior smelled of damp wood and horses. Maria settled herself on the padded leather seat, arranging her skirts as the driver shut the door.

  The windows were covered with thick canvas curtains. When she moved to push them aside she found they’d been nailed down on all sides. A spurt of alarm jolted through her. It’s a London cab, she reminded herself. They seal the windows to keep out bad air. But it had been over three years since the plague that had claimed Maria’s family. A long time not to open the curtains again.

  There was a narrow opening at the back, just wide enough to pass coins for the fare, and through it she saw the driver sit on the narrow plank seat. He flicked his long whip and the horse jolted forward.

  As the large wheels were set in motion, Maria forced her anxiety to subside. Percy must have been listening after all when she’d told him how hard she’d worked on her dress, that rainfall would ruin the watered-silk panels. Such thoughtfulness boded well.

  The carriage rolled through Fetter Lane, loud with tin kettles and pans being beaten into shape. The smell of frying pancakes and fritters drifted from a huddle of food stalls; hot butter and woodsmoke.

  Maria leaned back, closed her eyes and tried not to let the nerves overwhelm her. She regretted deciding to travel to the church alone. But she had no one to give her away, and she hadn’t wanted her friends to witness her uncertainty.

  Maria cou
ld hear the colourful sleaze of Covent Garden now and guessed they’d passed the huge maypole marking the beginning of the party district. She imagined the bright dandies and beautiful hopefuls weaving drunkenly along the dirt streets and past the brothels. Tallow candles would be burning in every rickety wooden window, despite the spring sunshine.

  Then she felt the carriage wheels strike spongy ash, the sodden beginning of the Great Fire’s devastation. The vast black desert of blackened nubs of burned buildings.

  Maria sat up. ‘Why do we come this way?’ she demanded. ‘It’s dangerous in the ruins.’

  The carriage shuddered to a halt. Maria glanced through the narrow opening at the back. She could see the driver’s knees and a glimpse of a sooty backstreet amongst a jumble of charred walls. She could hear a chicken clucking and scratching around in the dirt.

  ‘Why do you stop?’ she asked, her nerves making her speak more sharply than she’d intended.

  ‘Someone wants to see you,’ said the driver’s disembodied voice. ‘Before you are wed.’

  Maria digested this. Something in her heart fluttered. ‘Who?’ she demanded.

  ‘Charlie Tuesday. The Thief Taker.’

  A bubble of joy rose up. He wants to see you. Beg you not to marry.

  Of course, she would never betray Percy, who was likely already waiting at the aisle. Honest, sensible Percy, whose courtship had been faultlessly mannered, who had offered her the life she’d always wanted – before Charlie came along. A comfortable wife in a comfortable home.

  Maria opened her mouth to say ‘drive on’. But temptation pricked at her. Surely there was no harm in talking to Charlie one last time? Afterwards she would be married and never see him more.

  ‘Take me to him,’ she said, attempting to sound indifferent.

  The carriage lurched down one narrow street and along another. Maria found herself trying not to smile at the thought of seeing Charlie. It wouldn’t do to give him hope. She would be measured, sorry and sympathetic.

  Maria peered from the window. The streets were getting darker, the buildings closer.

  A deep unease prickled back through her. She’d heard of girls being driven out of London and robbed in the hackney carriages. The driver knew you were to be married, she reminded herself. He knew Charlie’s name and his thief taker work, chasing down criminals.

  ‘Wait,’ she said. ‘I’ve changed my mind. We’ll to the church straight.’

  But the carriage kept moving.

  Maria knocked on the roof. ‘If you please,’ she said loudly, ‘I want to go to the church.’

  The driver was silent. Trepidation took hold. Maria put out a hand and tried the door handle. It turned, but something was preventing it from opening.

  A feeling of panic rose up, tightening her throat. She pushed at the tightly nailed canvas window covering. It didn’t move. She turned to look out of the back. The alley they were travelling along was completely deserted. Not a soul in sight.

  Maria took a full few seconds to think about what this might mean. No innocent explanation was forthcoming.

  ‘Let me out!’ she demanded in a louder voice. ‘Now!’

  The driver’s knees bent. He lowered his head level with hers.

  Maria’s blue eyes silently took in the mad smile playing on his face, the twitching fingers. She was absorbing everything about him now. His hair was jet black and his skin was clean-shaven and youthful. But the eyes were old, and he was deathly pale.

  ‘Who are you?’ she whispered.

  ‘You know me very well,’ he said. ‘You have always known me. I am Jack in the Green. I am Robin Goodfellow. I am all the dark things that stalk the night.’

  She suddenly realised what was wrong with his clothes. They were inside out. A charm to deter fairies.

  ‘What do you want?’ she said, forcing herself to speak calmly.

  ‘You know very well what I want,’ he said. ‘The Lord and Lady.’

  Maria’s stomach turned to ice. He somehow knew of the mystery she’d stumbled across whilst transcribing Percy’s legal documents. She’d been so careful to conceal her findings. Maria closed her eyes as the magnitude of her situation drew in. The Lord and Lady, vanished from the Tower of London during Cromwell’s reign.

  ‘You won’t find the Lord and Lady,’ she said. ‘There’s only one man who can. And he’ll never help you.’

  ‘Charlie Tuesday?’ The man smiled. ‘The man you jilted?’

  ‘He isn’t . . .’ Maria stopped herself.

  How could he know that?

  It didn’t matter. Not now.

  ‘You think Charlie Tuesday worth dying for?’ he asked.

  ‘No,’ she said quietly, ‘I wouldn’t die for Charlie Tuesday. But I’d die to protect the Lord and Lady.’

  A sudden rush of calm filled her. He would kill her, Maria knew. Nothing she could do about that. But she could choose how she died.

  ‘I won’t help you,’ she said steadily. It felt unreal, as though she were reading lines in a play.

  ‘You will,’ he said, straightening out of view. She heard the whip crack and felt the horse pick up speed.

  Maria began kicking at the door with all her strength. It held firm. She threw herself against the window. ‘Help!’ Maria shouted, pressing her mouth to the curtains. ‘Help me, please!’

  ‘No one can hear you,’ came the driver’s voice as the carriage raced on. ‘Didn’t your mother warn you about fairies? We make people disappear.’

  Chapter 1

  Charlie Tuesday was running. He’d easily kept pace with the carriage as it left Temple Bar and moved along the half-burned remains of Fleet Street. But as it passed Lud Gate into the sooty devastation of Paternoster Row the vehicle gathered speed.

  Charlie sprinted past the scorched stationers’ shops, his bare feet stirring up a pale-grey confetti of burned books. Street children were playing on the road ahead. Charlie shouted a warning and they scattered as the carriage barrelled towards them and out of sight.

  He made a quick calculation. Only busy Cheapside was broad enough for horse-drawn traffic. This hackney carriage would be lost amongst the multitude of identical vehicles.

  Charlie swung right, cutting across the great black void where St Paul’s Cathedral had once stood. Ash-streaked labourers were erecting the beginnings of a mighty scaffold and filling sacks of dark rubble.

  Charlie’s gaze landed on a parked stonemason’s wagon, wheels thickly grimed with red clay from Brick Lane. He raced towards it, freed a handful of rosy earth from the wheel-spokes and bolted for the scaffold. A few men shouted a protest as Charlie climbed the timber frame with a speed born of his street-urchin childhood. He made the top and ran easily along the narrow beam of a large crane, eyes scouring the black streets below. The scaffold beneath his feet shook and he glanced down to see a stonemason’s apprentice moving determinedly towards him brandishing a hammer.

  Charlie looked north. The wake of the recent Great Fire spread out before him, like a monstrous black bite out of the chaotic city streets. Then he spotted the carriage, cornering at speed towards Cheapside. Behind him, the apprentice was closing in.

  Keeping the carriage in his sights, Charlie jumped onto the arm of another large wooden crane, this one stretching high over the building works. Taking aim, he threw the clod of red earth. It arced towards the departing carriage, then burst in a bright scatter on the hackney’s dark wood roof.

  He heard a creaking beneath him. The hammer-wielding apprentice had made it onto the highest part of the scaffold.

  Charlie held his hands up. ‘Easy, friend,’ he said, keeping his bare feet balanced on the crane. ‘I’m a thief taker. Following that carriage.’ He inclined his head to the red-spattered coach now easing into the Cheapside traffic.

  The apprentice lowered his hammer slightly. ‘Thieves don’t ride in carriages,’ he said.

  ‘True,’ agreed Charlie. ‘But lawyers do. And I need to see where that man goes.’

  Char
lie was keeping half an eye on the carriage. Yesterday, he’d received an anonymous request from an address in the legal district, to meet in a backstreet theatre. Charlie wasn’t naïve enough to trust mysterious invitations. So tailing the carriage of the suspected author prior to their meeting seemed a sensible precaution.

  Charlie assessed his aggressor. ‘You’re an apprentice?’ he said. ‘It’s Lent. Why don’t you go pull down brothels with your fellows?’

  The boy narrowed his eyes. ‘How did you know I’m a ’prentice?’

  ‘Young men not permitted wives have a certain look about them.’

  ‘Who do you think you are?’ challenged the apprentice.

  ‘I’m Charlie Tuesday.’

  The apprentice laughed contemptuously. ‘Charlie Tuesday is tall as King Charles and broad as an ox.’

  Charlie smiled. ‘Quick thinking and middling height serve me well enough.’

  ‘If you’re so clever,’ said the apprentice, ‘you would never have let yourself be cornered.’ He hefted his hammer. ‘Up here there’s no way out.’

  ‘Only if you lack a certain perspective for distances,’ said Charlie. He stooped and cut the rope at his feet. The crane went swinging wide, the beam on which Charlie stood heading fast towards Paternoster Row. He spread his bare toes, then braced as the beam jolted to a halt and leapt towards the blackened roof timbers of a burned-out shop.

  Charlie landed on a charred rafter, then ran across the rooftops. As he took in Cheapside below he saw the carriage, now clearly distinguished by its red dusting.

  He watched as it headed towards Covent Garden.

  ‘Just as I thought,’ muttered Charlie under his breath as he slipped down to the spongy burned earth of Newgate Street. ‘Headed to the theatre.’

  Now he knew for certain the identity of the man inside the carriage. But Charlie could think of no good reason why this individual would want to meet.

  Chapter 2

  Charlie slipped into the theatre and was greeted by the familiar smell of spilled beer and trodden orange peels. The benches in the pit were dotted with ragged boys holding seats for wealthier folk. At the edges, women were laying out baskets of stewed apples and greasy pig knuckles.

  The Birdcage was London’s most dangerous illegal theatre. It attracted an explosive mix of drunks, prostitutes, prize fighters and the odd pack of thrill-seeking aristocrats.

  Charlie stepped down behind the stage, where a bulky man with a bad skin condition lounged on a wooden stool. A well-worn truncheon rested near his feet.

 

‹ Prev