had a visit from … that is to say, someone asked me about…”
Wolf just kept waiting. He really had an amazing talent for creating the sort of awkward silences that people couldn’t help babbling into. Was it something you could learn, Sacha wondered, or was Wolf just born knowing how to do it?
“They had blueprints,” Mendelsohn blurted. “Someone had filed a patent on the device, and they wanted my opinion as to whether it would actually work or not before they … well, I got the impression they were considering investing a rather large sum of money.”
“They?”
“I’m afraid I’m not at liberty to tell you the names of the parties involved,” Mendelsohn said primly. “A rabbi is like a priest. People repose confidence in him. And they have a certain expectation of—”
“Naturally,” Wolf agreed in a pleasant voice. “Your congregation depends upon your discretion. And such a highly respectable congregation as yours must expect their rabbi to be very discreet indeed.”
“I appreciate your understanding, Inquisi—”
“But under the present circumstances, I’m sure they’ll understand when you explain to them the necessity of cooperating with our investigation. Would Monday be too soon to start questioning people? And do you have a spare office we can use for our … well,
“You want to drag respectable people down here and question them like criminals?” Mendelsohn yelped, his dignity forgotten. “What on earth could you possibly have to ask them about?”
Wolf smiled beatifically. “I’m sure I’ll think of something.”
Rabbi Mendelsohn moaned softly and put a hand to his handsome forehead. “If I tell you who it was, will you go away?”
Wolf’s smile broadened.
“Fine! It was Thomas Edison. And since you’ll probably find out anyway, you might as well know now that it was Mr. Morgaunt’s librarian, Miss da Serpa, who made the appointment for him.”
“You said someone had filed a patent on the device. Do you remember the name by any chance?”
“No.”
Wolf’s pale eyes widened. It was such a small movement that you couldn’t even really call it an expression. Yet it seemed to have a remarkable effect on Rabbi Mendelsohn.
“That is to say, I didn’t really pay attention, but I… I think it started with a
For a moment Wolf looked like he was about to ask another question. But then he slipped his notebook into his pocket and unfolded his lanky, rumpled frame from the leather armchair. “Thank you, Rabbi Mendelsohn. You’ve been most helpful.”
Suddenly Wolf seemed to be in an unusual hurry. He grabbed the two children by the elbows and practically dragged them back through the synagogue and onto the sidewalk.
“That’s ridiculous!” Lily erupted as soon as they were outside. “Morgaunt can’t have summoned Edison’s dybbuk! Why would he want to kill his own business partner?”
“I don’t know,” Wolf said shortly. Then, to Sacha’s writhing mortification, he asked, “this Rabbi Kessler wouldn’t be any relation of yours, would he, Sacha?”
“No! Well … maybe.”
Wolf raised his eyebrows.
“I have a big family. he’s some kind of … distant cousin? I’d have to check.”
Now Wolf and Lily were both looking at him like he was crazy.
“Well, check, then,” Wolf said. “And find out where he lives. I want to talk to him.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN. Tea with Mrs. Astral
WOLF STOOD OUTSIDE Rabbi Mendelsohn’s temple looking up and down the block and blinking in astonishment. “Well, bless my soul!” he murmured. “how extraordinary!”
It took Sacha a moment to see what Wolf was so surprised about. Then he realized this was the first time he could remember that there hadn’t been a cab waiting at the curb for them.
Wolf scanned the block again, as if he suspected there might be one hiding behind a tree or under a manhole. “Perhaps on Fifth Avenue?” he hazarded.
But there were no cabs there either, even though they waited anxiously for several minutes.
Wolf produced a battered pocket watch and checked the time. “I really need to get back to Hell’s Kitchen and call the Patent Office before closing time. I’d better just leave you two here and walk across the park. Why don’t you take the rest of the day off?”
And then he hurried away, leaving Lily and Sacha staring after him.
“Can you get home all right from here?” Sacha asked Lily.
“Of course I can. I live just around the corner.”
“Oh,” Sacha said, feeling a little silly. “Right.”
Lily turned to leave, hesitated, and then turned back to Sacha with a look on her face that suggested she was about to perform an unpleasant but necessary chore. “I guess I should invite you over to my house for tea,” she mumbled, as if the words were being squeezed out of her against her will. “If you want. But I’m sure you have better things to do.”
Sacha felt a flash of anger. What was the point of giving an invitation she so plainly didn’t want him to accept? And how dare she make it so insultingly obvious that she didn’t think he was good enough to enter her house? He started to make some polite excuse, then decided to make her squirm a little. “Actually,” he said, “tea sounds delightful.”
The Astral home was even more spectacularly luxurious than J. P. Morgaunt’s mansion. Not that Sacha had much time to look around. Lily hurried him through a side door to a narrow creaking stairway that was obviously only meant to be used by servants. She was plainly terrified that her parents would see him. Sacha felt humiliated. He wished he hadn’t come at all. In fact, he decided, there was no reason he shouldn’t just turn around and leave right now if this was how Lily was going to act.
Except that when he turned around to stomp back down the stairs, he found himself face-to-face with Mrs. Astral herself.
“You must be Sacha Kessler!” she said with a brilliant smile that made Sacha feel as if he were the only person in the whole world Mrs. Astral cared about. “I can’t think why Lily didn’t tell me she was bringing you! She knows I’ve been dying to meet you. I do hope you have time to stay for tea?”
Sacha glanced at Lily. She gave a tiny, stiff shake of her blond head and mouthed a single word at him:
“Thank you,” he told Mrs. Astral. “I’d love to.”
Sacha took the arm that Mrs. Astral graciously offered him and accompanied her into a vast drawing room filled with palm trees, marble statuary, and overstuffed furniture. Lily trudged behind them like a soldier being ordered into a hopeless battle.
Sacha had read almost as many newspaper stories about Maleficia Astral as he’d read about J. P. Morgaunt. She’d been a famous beauty, the daughter of an old New England family from Salem, Massachusetts. Then she’d married the heir to the Astral family fortune — rumored to be a formidable Wall Street Wizard in his own right. Now she ruled New York high society with absolute authority. No one could be invited into the best houses without her seal of approval. No ball or soiree was a success unless she attended. And any proper New York socialite would rather die a thousand deaths than wear a gown that clashed with whatever Maleficia Astral was wearing.
From what he’d read in the papers, Sacha had assumed that Mrs. Astral would be haughty and snobbish. But instead, she was bewitching. Her eyes were the brilliant iridescent green of hummingbird wings. Her clothes were impeccably ladylike, yet they flowed over her body like water rippling over rocks, revealing every sinuous curve and