broken glass in my joints, like someone’s been driving nails into my head. I can’t even get up without the stuff. I can barely move.” He pulled down his scarf and showed the therian his ruined, half-transparent face. “Do you know what this is? It’s called the fades. You get it from working in factories that use flux. Usually children get it. It kills them before they turn fifteen. Sometimes, it doesn’t show up until you’re an adult. But it kills you just the same. Two years, ten years, no one gets away from it. And it just rots your body away.”

“You worked in a factory?”

“For two years, after my father died. A long time ago. Before they knew what caused it, made them start ventilating the factories better.” Beckett snorted. “The first factory regulations were put in place the year after I quit to join the marines.”

Gorud said nothing for a moment, then, “Still, it’s too much.”

“No. I need it. I can’t work without it.”

“You think the world will fall apart if you stop working? Will He wake up?”

The old coroner rubbed at the number corner of his mouth. “Huh. No. Probably not.”

“So. Why?”

Beckett shrugged. “What else can I do? It’s this, or lie in bed until I die.” He sniffed and looked around. “It’s cold. We should go. You drink djang?”

“Haha,” Gorud said. It was not a laugh, exactly, but a sound meant to indicate that he was laughing. “Where do you think you got djang from? Thukeri have invented djang.”

“Well, come on then,” the coroner said gruffly. “I’m thirsty.”

Ten

Emilia Vie-Gorgon was nothing if not generous, and with the nearly bottomless wealth of the Raithower Vie- Gorgons at her disposal, she could afford to be. When Skinner had returned to her boarding-house, late that night, she found that most of her belongings had already been packed up and burly-sounding men with heavy, competent footsteps were in the process of moving them out. Mrs. Crewell, astonishment plain in her voice, had been waiting for her with a handful of letters, details of the arrangement between the former coroner and the Vie-Gorgon heiress.

“It says there’s a house in Lanternbridge,” Mrs. Crewell was saying, as men tromped past with trunks of clothes, “leased under William Vie-Gorgon’s name that’s mean to be for you and your assistant. There’s a cook there, and a maid that should come in once a day, and you’re to be given an allowance of…my goodness.” She quoted a figure substantially higher than Skinner had ever made with the Coroners, but must have still been paltry compared to the funds that the Raithower Vie-Gorgons regularly had access to. “If you don’t mind my asking, Miss Skinner, what…what is this all about?”

Skinner permitted herself a truly enigmatic smile, one that she ordinarily reserved for the most outrageous of circumstances. These were certainly circumstances that might qualify, even if the wine and good company hadn’t managed to coax her humor to the surface. “I have found an opportunity, Mrs. Crewell. I imagine that you’ll hear about it, soon enough. Let me thank you for your good nature and excellent hospitality. I surely cannot imagine a better host than you have been. Do not!” She suddenly raised her voice to speak to the movers. “Do not even think about moving that instrument without wrapping it in cloth, first. Have you any idea what the cold weather will do to the strings?”

She traveled by coach from Chapel Height, skirting the lower edge of New Bank, and into Lanternbridge. The neighborhood was near one of the sinuous curves of the Stark, built near one of the first bridges across its length. Centuries earlier, when Trowth the city had really been a half a dozen loosely-connected little villages, an enterprising family member-probably an Ennering, but historical documents differ-had put three long lines of bright yellow lanterns along the bridge, and ensured that they burned at every hour of the night. Travelers, merchants, tinkers, and anyone else that might bring a coin or two of commerce to one of the competing districts were, once the sun went down, quite naturally drawn to the brightly-lit bridge, and the neighborhood found its inns and taverns always full come evening.

The good trade made Lanternbridge one of the wealthiest districts in the area, a characteristic which persisted for many years, until the sprawling mass of Trowth finally, by virtue of dozens more bridges across the river, spread out to the far side of the Stark, and pushed its travelers’ lodgings with it. Lanternbridge fell into disrepair for nearly a century then, gradually sliding down the inevitable decline into slumhood, until the Great Forfeiture. Once the wealthy families abandoned Old Bank for Lanternbridge’s neighbor, New Bank, the place underwent a kind of cultural renaissance. All of the decently-paid servants, craftsmen, cobblers, haberdashers, tailors, and restauranteurs relocated to be nearer to the wealth, and Lanternbridge was where they found themselves.

By Skinner’s time, it was known as a clean, quiet, safe neighborhood, with an exciting mixture of solidly middle-class, cheap journeyman shops and startlingly luxurious fashion houses and dining rooms. It was a common place of residence for moderately wealthy, not-quite-Esteemed merchant families, for up-and-coming and ambitious young people, and for certain relatively famous and popular actors and theater managers.

The house in Lanternbridge was a cozy three-storey building, not a mansion by any means, but by far more comfortable than any house Skinner had ever hoped to own. She took a few minutes to insist that the movers tour her around the space-getting a feel for distance and location, locating the stove without actually having to risk burning her hands-then hastily ushered them all out. It was far too late at night to begin work, to begin even pondering the work, and so instead she took advantage of the huge, soft, warm bed that had been provided her.

When morning came around, and anemic sunlight sifted through the gritty black clouds that made up the roof of Trowth, Skinner decided that she would likewise took advantage of a late morning, stirring only faintly as the maid brought her breakfast-covered over, with a tiny heat emitter at the base of the tray, it would stay hot for hours she knew-then pushing her face deep into downy pillows and sweet, satisfied dreams. The weak sunlight crept across the floor of her room, warming and brightening it. Gas lamps along the walls burst to life, bringing with them more light and heat, but Skinner would not be moved.

It was nearly noon when she finally roused herself, sampling the bacon, eggs, and toast that had been left for her breakfast and was, indeed, still hot. Years of early mornings, to get a start on the day’s inevitably macabre labors caused her a twinge of guilt when she realized the time, but she resolved that she would not regret starting to work as late as she liked. Late mornings, Skinner thought to herself, Are the privilege of the artist.

Skinner chose a light dressing-gown for herself, rather than struggling to strap herself into the substantial undergarments required by her coroner’s suits. Not having to get fully-dressed in the morning was another luxury she had rarely enjoyed. Waking up in a house, being beholden to no one-it was almost impossible to imagine that, the very day before, she’d planned on renting a rat-trap flat in Bluewater to stay off the streets.

Downstairs, company was awaiting her, and Skinner recalled that the letter mentioned she would have an assistant who would share the house with her. She’d assumed an arrangement would have to be made, as the knocker required someone who could take dictation for her, but had quite forgotten that the assistant would be living with her.

“Miss Skinner?”

Karine. She recognized the voice at once, and of course it was Karine. The young indige women had lost her job at the same time Skinner had, and there couldn’t be anyone more qualified to assist her. “My dear,” Skinner said, “It’s so good to hear your voice.”

“They didn’t tell me who I would work for,” her voice smiled, “I am glad it’s you, miss.”

Skinner experienced a fleeting moment of worry, at the astonishing extent of Emilia Vie-Gorgon’s information. How on earth did she know about Karine? The Vie-Gorgon heiress must have men everywhere. Skinner shook off the thought.

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