Chris Moriarty
Inquisitor's Apprentice
Contents
The Boy Who Could See Witches
Whose Pig Are You?
Watcher in the Shadows
Sacha Makes a Promise
Lily Astral
Inquisitor Wolf
The House of Morgaunt
Industrial Witches of the World Unite!
The Wizard of Luna Park
The Handmaid of Science
The Master of Manacles
The Money Coat
Rushing the Growler
The Immortals of Chinatown
A Shande far di Goyim
Some Old Goat Named Kessler
Tea with Mrs. Astral
Up the River
Mrs. Worley's Soul Catcher
The Path of No Action
Sacha Goes House Hunting
Gone, All Gone
Bull Moose
A Long Way Down
The Lone Gunman
On Horrible Bird Feet
No Ticket, No Show
Seeing the Elephant
Admission to the Burning Ruins 1 °Cents
Beginnings
A Brief Note on Alternate History
CHAPTER ONE. The Boy Who Could See Witches
THE DAY SACHA found out he could see witches was the worst day of his life.
It started out as a perfectly ordinary Friday afternoon — if you could ever call Friday afternoons on Hester Street ordinary.
People said there were more human beings per square mile on New York’s Lower east Side than in the Black Hole of Calcutta, and Sacha thought it must be true. the roar of all those people was like the surf of a mighty ocean. You could hear them working and eating, talking and praying, running the sewing machines that clattered away from dawn to dusk in the windows of every tenement building. You could feel their dreams crackling along the cobblestones like the electricity in the big transformers down at Thomas Edison’s Pearl Street power station. And you could feel the shivery static charge of their magic — both the legal and the illegal kind.
Not that anyone was worried about illegal magic at half past four on a Friday afternoon. Fridays on Hester Street were only about one thing: shopping.
Pushcarts packed every inch of pavement from the East River Docks to the Bowery. Mobs of housewives jostled and hollered, desperate to get their
Every piece of food had to be sold now, before the whole Lower East Side shut down for
Most Fridays, Sacha’s mother got off work at the Pentacle Shirtwaist Factory just in time to race home, grab the week’s savings out of the pickle jar behind the stove, and dash back outside half an hour before sunset.
That was when the real craziness began.
You’d think a woman with only half an hour to do three days’ worth of grocery shopping wouldn’t have time to haggle. But if you thought that, you didn’t know Ruthie Kessler. Sacha’s mother went shopping like a general goes to war. her weapons were a battered shopping basket, a blistering tongue, and a fistful of pennies. And her children were her foot soldiers.
Sacha and his older sister, Bekah, would sprint up and down Hester Street, ducking around knees and elbows and dodging within a hair’s breadth of oncoming traffic. they’d visit every shop, every pushcart, every pack peddler. They’d race back to their mother to report on the state of the enemy’s battle lines. And then Mrs. Kessler would issue her orders and dole out her pennies:
“Three cents for an onion? that’s
“What do you mean you’re not sure how fresh Mrs. Lieberman’s tomatoes are? Are you my son, or aren’t you? Go back and
“All right, all right! Tell Mr. Rabinowitz you’ll take the herring. But if he chops the head off like he did last