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The Magnificent Lizzie Brown and the Devil's Hound

Page 7

by Vicki Lockwood


  Lizzie grabbed ahold of her friend and scrambled up the wall as Dru pulled with all his might. She almost jumped down the other side, before it struck her that Malachy might still need help.

  Malachy backed toward the wall, jabbing his stick at the snarling dog. He glanced up at Dru. “You ready?”

  “Come on!” yelled Dru.

  Malachy shoved the stick upward. As the dog came racing toward him, Dru caught hold of it and pulled. Lizzie threw her arms around Dru’s waist, keeping him securely on top of the wall, while Dru pulled Malachy all the way up to their level.

  The dog’s snapping jaws caught Malachy’s boot. He kicked hard, but the animal’s teeth sank in and locked like a vice. Lizzie and Dru pulled with all their strength.

  “Get off me!” Malachy shrieked.

  The lantern swung to point in their direction. Lizzie heard gruff voices shouting, and whoever was holding it began to run.

  Suddenly Malachy’s boot came off, and he came free with such force the three of them almost fell off the wall.

  “I’m okay,” Malachy panted, settling down between them. Lizzie patted him on the back, feeling grateful for his bravery. Down below, the dog tore and ripped at the boot, pulling it to pieces.

  “I think we’re about to have company,” Malachy said, glancing at the approaching figures. “Should we wait and see who it is?”

  “I’ve had enough nasty surprises for one night,” Lizzie said. “Let’s go.”

  They hurried back along the road, with Malachy moving even slower than usual thanks to his bootless good foot. From behind the cemetery wall came a long, mournful howl. They picked up their pace, eager to put as much distance between them and the Devil’s Hound as they could.

  * * *

  “There’s a light on in the tea tent,” Malachy pointed out as they drew near to the circus once again. “What’s Ma Sullivan doing up at this hour?”

  “Let’s go see. I could go for a cup of tea.” Lizzie rubbed her hands together.

  But it wasn’t Ma Sullivan who was waiting for them. It was Nora, Erin, and Hari, huddled around three cups of steaming tea, playing cards by the light of an oil lantern. Nora jumped up and hugged Lizzie as she came in. “Oh, thank goodness. You’re safe.”

  “None of us could sleep, so we decided to wait up for you,” Hari explained.

  “We heard howling,” Erin said, “and Nora thought you were dead for sure.”

  Nora pushed her. “You thought so too, Erin.”

  “She was crying like a baby—” Erin broke off as she saw the look on Lizzie’s face. “What happened? You look like death!”

  Malachy sat down. “Get us a drink, and I’ll tell you all about it.”

  The twins obliged, and Malachy explained everything that had happened. The others listened like wide-eyed children being told a ghost story around a fire.

  Lizzie sat next to Dru, thinking about how easily he’d lifted her up the wall. The boy was so much stronger than he looked. As she sipped the tea Nora had brought her, warmth began to seep back into her bones. The nightmare chase in the cemetery seemed almost unreal now, like a half-remembered dream.

  When Malachy finished, Nora shook her head. “Lizzie, why didn’t you listen? The old stories aren’t all nonsense, you know. We almost lost you to the Devil’s Hound.”

  Lizzie shuddered. “It was huge. It had teeth like broken glass.”

  “Just like our ma told you,” Erin said. “Maybe next time we tell you not to risk your neck going up into that cemetery, you’ll listen. There’s bad business going on up there. It’s not for the likes of us to go messing with.”

  “It’s a bad business, all right,” said Malachy, leaning back in his chair. “But it ain’t the devil up there, and it wasn’t his hound that tore my boot off.”

  “Oh, really?” Nora seemed exasperated. “And I suppose you’ve got it all worked out, have you?”

  “I might have.” Malachy scratched his chin.

  “Well?” Nora prodded.

  “I think we ran across a couple of grave robbers,” Malachy said in a matter-of-fact tone.

  Lizzie was about to laugh the idea off but stopped short. The sounds of digging, the mysterious figures, the lantern, the guard dog . . . Malachy’s theory made sense. They all stared at each other in horror as the idea sank in.

  Only one thing didn’t add up for her. “Why would anyone want to steal a dead body?” Lizzie asked.

  “Probably witchcraft,” said Erin. “There’s things a witch can do with a body . . .”

  “It’s not the body they want,” Malachy interrupted her. “Rich people are often buried with their jewelery. Sometimes it’s just because old people’s knuckles swell up and the undertaker can’t get their rings off. But some greedy old folks can’t bear the idea of giving their wealth to anyone else, so they try and take it with ’em.”

  Lizzie gasped. “That funeral we saw when we arrived!”

  “Exactly,” Malachy said.

  Lizzie’s stomach churned. “They’ve got to be stopped,” she said. “It ain’t fair to the dead people. What’s it say on the graves? ‘Rest in peace.’ So how can they rest peacefully if people are digging them up and stealing their things?”

  Lizzie thought of Becky’s father and the humble grave she’d seen. She still had the horse brass in her pocket that Becky had given her. It was part of the pair he’d been buried with. On impulse, she reached in and touched it. Maybe Jacob Hayward could help. After all, who better to tell her what was going on at the cemetery than one of the dead people?

  Instantly the tea tent and everyone in it vanished. Lizzie was plunged into a vision so powerful that it completely drowned out the real world. Swirling black clouds bloomed around her, like ink in water. In front of her was Becky’s father’s disembodied face.

  “Sacred ground!” he screamed. “It was sacred ground! They had no right!”

  The voice echoed, as if he was yelling from the end of a long tunnel. For the first time, Lizzie felt frightened of him. This angry ghost couldn’t be more different from the peaceful spirit she’d seen before.

  “Thieves! They had no right!” the spirit yelled.

  “What do you mean?” Lizzie tried to ask, but her breath wouldn’t come.

  As suddenly as the vision had started, it ended, and Lizzie was back in her chair with a jolt. The others surrounded her, looking on with anxious faces.

  “Lizzie, what happened?” Malachy said. “Your eyes were all white. Like you were having a fit.”

  “Should we take you to the doctor?” Erin asked, reaching out to feel Lizzie’s forehead.

  Lizzie coughed. “I had a vision. I saw Becky’s father. He spoke to me.”

  Erin jerked her hand away as if it had been burned. “Her dead father?”

  “Obviously her dead father!” Lizzie said. “She don’t have any other fathers, does she? He was really upset. Screaming.”

  “What did he say?” asked Hari.

  “He was yelling about thieves, and how it was sacred ground, and they had no right,” Lizzie told them. “I think Malachy’s right. There are grave robbers at the cemetery, and they’ve stolen something from him. Disturbed his rest.”

  Malachy drained the last of his tea and wiped his mouth with his sleeve. “There’s only one thing to do then. We have to go back tomorrow night to see if Lizzie’s right.”

  “And if I am?” Lizzie asked.

  “Then we’ll catch these grave robbers before they can strike again!”

  CHAPTER 9

  “Mornin’, dear!” Anita, the circus dwarf, called from the door of her trailer. “Ain’t you supposed to be off to see the doctor with all the rest?”

  Lizzie yawned and stretched. For a moment, she was confused. She wasn’t ill — why would she need to see the doctor? Then suddenly she remembered: it was vaccina
tion day. “What time is it?” she asked.

  “Time you was in the show tent, my girl. That’s where the others are meeting before setting off for the doctor’s house,” Anita said. “Hey, you’re not worried about the needle, are you? Don’t be. It’s over in a jiff.”

  “I’m trying not to think about it,” Lizzie said. “I’m just looking forward to visiting JoJo.”

  “Good girl. Here, I’ve got something for you to give him.” Anita handed her a little tin, tied with a bright golden bow. “Peppermint creams,” she explained. “He loves ’em. And if the doctor says he can’t have ’em yet, then stick ’em by his bed for him to enjoy when he’s better.”

  Mario, the circus giant, stopped Lizzie on her way out. “You taking those up to JoJo?” he asked. “Can you give him this from me too?”

  “A book?” Lizzie said. The cover read The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman.

  “It’s the funniest thing I ever read,” said Mario. “I don’t want JoJo getting gloomy up there by himself. That wouldn’t be right.”

  “I agree,” said Lizzie with a firm nod. Nothing’s worse than a sad clown, she thought.

  As she turned to go, Lizzie saw the Amazon Queen and Dru’s father, Pierre, coming toward her. Both of them were carrying little bundles. “Are those for JoJo, by any chance?” she asked with a grin.

  By the time Lizzie reached the show tent, she’d been given so many presents for the sick clown that Hari had to find her a spare sack to carry them all in.

  “I feel like Father Christmas!” Lizzie said with a laugh. “Everyone loves JoJo, don’t they?”

  “All one big family at Fitzy’s,” Hari said, quoting one of the ringmaster’s favorite sayings.

  It’s true, though, Lizzie thought. JoJo’s blood relatives were all far away in Newcastle, but he wasn’t alone. Everyone in the extended family of the circus was rallying around to help him. She felt proud to be a part of it as she hefted the heavy sack onto her shoulder and started walking with the others, down the country lane to Dr. Gladwell’s house.

  * * *

  Dr. Gladwell welcomed the small crowd of circus people into his home. “Now, you may have heard a whole load of silly nonsense about the evils of vaccination,” he began, “but it’s a perfectly harmless process. All we do is give you a dose of weak germs, so your body learns how to fight the strong germs of smallpox.”

  “Do you have to use a needle?” asked Collette. She looked pale and faint.

  “I’m afraid so, young lady. The vaccine has to go into your blood, so — pop!”

  Collette clutched at her brother’s arm. “Dru, je vais vomir.”

  Malachy strolled up to the doctor and tugged his sleeve up. “Go on, Doc. You can do me first.”

  “Brave lad,” Dr. Gladwell said. “Well done.”

  Lizzie was impressed and even more so when the syringe came out. Malachy’s bold smile didn’t even flicker. The syringe looked like a miniature brass cannon with a needle like a giant insect’s sting.

  It took only a few seconds. “There! All done.” Dr. Gladwell cleaned the needle, then patted Malachy on the back. “Off you go. Now, Lizzie?” he said, motioning her forward.

  Lizzie flinched as the needle went in. When it was her turn, Collette rolled her eyes and sank into a chair, her hand pressed to her forehead. What a drama queen, Lizzie thought.

  “Splendid,” said the doctor. “Brave souls all.”

  “Can we visit JoJo now, please?” Lizzie immediately asked.

  “I’m afraid he’s asleep,” said the doctor. “Now, who’s next?”

  Lizzie and Malachy glanced at one another. While the doctor’s back was turned, they quietly slipped out into the hallway.

  “He didn’t say no, did he?” Lizzie whispered.

  “Let’s give JoJo the presents anyway,” said Malachy. “It’ll be nice for him to wake up to, won’t it? Seeing all that stuff.”

  “So where is he?” Lizzie asked.

  Malachy peered upstairs. “Probably in one of the bedrooms.”

  They crept upstairs, feeling like thieves. The hallway smelled of beeswax from the candles and the polish, but there was a strange chemical smell too. It turned Lizzie’s stomach. “What’s that smell?” she said.

  “I dunno,” Malachy replied. “Carbolic soap, I think.”

  It’s not carbolic, Lizzie thought. I’ve smelled carbolic a thousand times, when Pa was making fake sores on his arms and legs with soap and vinegar. It’s something worse. But she said nothing.

  The upstairs hallway lay before them with doors all along it. One had a rolling cart outside with a white enamel basin and a jug of water on it. Another syringe, every bit as fearsome as the one the doctor had used on Malachy, rested in the basin. There was blood on its tip.

  “This must be his room.” Gently, so as not to wake him, Lizzie pushed open the door. To her surprise, a low moan came from inside. “JoJo?” she said. “Oh, no!”

  The clown was barely recognizable. Weeping sores covered his face. Lizzie’s horror only grew when she saw there were white lumps on his tongue. She dumped the sack of presents on a nearby table and hurried to his bedside.

  “How could he be so much worse?” Malachy said, shocked.

  “They’re killin’ me,” JoJo groaned. “Stabbing me all over like . . . Julius Caesar.”

  “He’s not making any sense,” Lizzie said. “JoJo, it’s us! Lizzie and Malachy! Can you hear me?”

  “Lizzie?” JoJo’s eyes opened wide. He looked terrified. “She mustn’t come here. Tell her to stay away.”

  “I am Lizzie,” she said, trying not to cry. “Your friend.”

  “They’re trying to kill me with their needles!” JoJo spluttered, then fell back against the pillow. Just as Lizzie was about to shake him, he heaved a huge rattling breath.

  “What are you doing in here?” a voice snapped. “Get out!”

  Lizzie turned and saw Mrs. Crowe standing in the doorway with a syringe in her hand. She was grasping it like a dagger.

  “What’s happened to him?” Lizzie demanded.

  “The patient is delirious,” Mrs. Crowe said. “He needs to rest, or he’ll never recover.”

  “But we—” Lizzie started to say.

  “Out!” The housekeeper flung out a thick arm, pointing them back down the stairs.

  Lizzie waited until they were safely out of the house before saying anything. “I don’t trust that old woman,” she muttered. “She’s a nasty piece of work.”

  “She’s trying to help JoJo get better, though,” Malachy said, but he didn’t sound too certain.

  “That might be true,” Lizzie said. “Still, I wish someone else was helping look after him. Someone kind like Dr. Gladwell, instead of that crabby old cow. I don’t trust her.”

  * * *

  As the circus people began to filter out of the house, fresh bandages on their arms, Malachy casually took Lizzie aside. “Fancy a stroll along the water?”

  “Don’t mind if I do,” Lizzie said, knowing exactly why he’d offered. They needed to make a plan.

  “See you back at the site!” Malachy waved to the others as he and Lizzie headed for the Grand Union Canal. Once they were out of earshot, he said, “We have to catch those grave robbers red-handed.”

  “Shouldn’t we get proof first?” Lizzie said. “I mean, we don’t know if it is grave robbers yet. Not for certain.”

  “What proof do you want?” Malachy asked. “Open graves? Dead people with no jewelery?”

  Lizzie thought for a moment. “I left some flowers on Becky’s father’s grave. If those flowers aren’t there tonight, it means someone’s been there and dug it up.”

  “That’s only one grave!” Malachy said, with a disbelieving laugh. “What about all the thousands of others?”

  “That’s the one we
need to check,” Lizzie insisted.

  “Why?” Malachy asked.

  “Because his spirit’s not at rest,” Lizzie replied.

  Malachy shuddered. “I forgot you’re talking to ghosts now. Remind me not to laugh at Ma Sullivan again.”

  Lizzie peered into the distance. Two men dressed in the rough overcoats and heavy boots of canal workers were standing near the water. They looked alike enough to be brothers, though one was clearly older.

  At first Lizzie thought someone had fallen in, because a shape was slowly sinking out of sight below the water. But then she realized the men weren’t helping. Instead, one of them was keeping lookout while the other one fumbled with a sack.

  “Do those two look suspicious to you?” she asked Malachy.

  “Very,” Malachy agreed.

  Lizzie slowed down.

  “No, don’t stop, keep walking!” Malachy hissed. “Pretend we haven’t noticed them.”

  The man with the sack, the older of the two, held it over the canal and shook it out. A few articles of clothing fell in. Clearly they weren’t sinking quickly enough for his satisfaction, because he sat down on the side and poked them under the surface of the water with his foot.

  Just then, the lookout noticed Lizzie and Malachy approaching. He nudged his companion, who turned to look, then hastily hid the sack behind his back. The lookout folded his arms and glared at them.

  We’re just two kids walking by a canal, Lizzie thought. What are you going to do, eh?

  The man with the sack quickly fished a bright metallic object out of it and threw it in the muddy water. The object caught the sun as it sank, making a warm flash of gold.

  “Did you see what that was?” Malachy whispered.

  Lizzie stared at the ripples. She was almost positive that it was a horse brass. In fact, she thought, I’d swear to it.

  They were only a few yards away from the two men now. Both men stood their ground, blocking the path. The younger one had his arms folded across his chest, while the older man slowly rolled up his sleeves to reveal thick, hairy arms.

  “Morning,” Lizzie said.

 

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