It was, as she had speculated earlier, the exact sort of dusty, disused parlor where she had met Spragg and Farquhar, but with a cry Miss Temple saw that she was not alone. She leapt to her feet and lunged at the two figures sprawled facedown on the floor. They were warm—both warm and—she whimpered with joy—they breathed! She had been reunited at last with her comrades! With all her available strength, she did her best to turn them over.
Miss Temple’s face was wet with tears, but she smiled as Doctor Svenson erupted into a fearsome spate of coughing, and she did her best to wedge her knees under his shoulders and help him to sit up. In the dim light she could not see if there was blood, but she could smell the pungent odors of the indigo clay infused throughout his clothing and his hair. She shoved again and swiveled his body so he could lean back against a nearby settee. He coughed again and recovered so far as to cover his mouth with a hand. Miss Temple brushed the hair from his eyes, beaming.
“Doctor Svenson—” she whispered.
“My dear Celeste—are we dead?”
“We are not, Doctor—”
“Excellent—is Chang?”
“No, Doctor—he is right here—”
“Are we still at Harschmort?”
“Yes, locked in a room.”
“And your mind remains your own?”
“Oh yes.”
“Capital…I am with you in a moment…beg pardon.”
He turned away from her and spat, took a deep breath, groaned, and heaved himself to a full sitting position, his eyes screwed tightly shut.
“My suffering Christ…,” he muttered.
“I have just been with our enemies!” she said. “Absolutely everything is going on.”
“Imagine it must be…pray forgive my momentary lapse…”
Miss Temple had scuttled to the other side of Cardinal Chang, doing her best not to cry at the spectacle he presented. If anything, the noxious smell was even more intense, and the dried crusts of blood around his nose and mouth and his collar, and the deathly paleness of his face, made clear the extremity of his health. She began to wipe his face with her robe, her other hand holding his head, when she realized that his dark glasses had come off as she’d rolled him over. She stared at the truly vicious scars across each eye and bit her lip at the poor man’s torment. Chang’s breath rattled in his chest like a shaken box of jumbled nails. Was he dying? Miss Temple pulled his head to her bosom and cradled it, whispering gently.
“Cardinal Chang,…you must come back to us…it is Celeste…I am with the Doctor…we cannot survive without you…”
Svenson heaved himself from his place and took hold of Chang’s wrist, placing his other hand upon the man’s forehead. A moment later his fingers were probing Chang’s throat and then Svenson had placed his ear against Chang’s chest, to gauge his ragged breath. He raised himself, sighed, and gently disengaged Miss Temple and searched with deliberate fingers along the back of Chang’s skull, where he’d been struck by the Colonel’s truncheon.
She stared helplessly at his probing fingers, stalking pale through Chang’s black hair.
“I thought you’d undergone their Process,” he observed mildly.
“No. I was able to counterfeit the scars,” she said. “I’m sorry if—well, I did not mean to disappoint you —”
“Hush, it sounds an excellent plan.”
“The Contessa found me out nevertheless.”
“That is no shame, I’m sure…I am happy to find you whole. May I ask—I am almost afraid to say it—”
“Eloise and I became separated. She bore the same false scars—I do not think she has been taken, but do not know where she is. Of course I am not entirely sure I know
The Doctor smiled at her, rather lost and wan, his eyes achingly clear. “Nor am I…that is the strangest part of it.” He looked pointedly at Miss Temple with the same troubling open gaze. “Of course, when does one ever know?”
He pulled his eyes from hers and cleared his throat.
“Indeed,” sniffed Miss Temple, moved by this unexpected glimpse into the Doctor’s heart, “still, I am terribly sorry to have lost her.”
“We have each done our best…that we are alive is a marvel…these things are equal between us.”
She nodded, wanting to say more but having no idea what those words might be. The Doctor sighed, thinking, and then with an impulsive gesture reached out to pinch tight Chang’s nose with one hand and cover his mouth with the other. Miss Temple gasped.
“But what—”
“A moment…”
A moment was all it took. Like a man brought back to life Chang’s eyes snapped open and his shoulders tensed, his arms groped at Svenson and the rattle in his lungs redoubled in strength. The Doctor removed his hands with a flourish and the Cardinal erupted with his own fit of coughing, dauntingly moist and accompanied by sprays of bloody saliva. Svenson and Miss Temple each took one of the Cardinal’s arms and raised him to his knees where he could more easily vent his body’s distress and its attendant discharge.
Chang wiped his mouth with his fingers and smeared them on the floor—there was no point in wiping them on his coat or trousers, Miss Temple saw. He turned to them, blinked, and then groped quickly at his face. Miss Temple held out his glasses with a smile.
“It is so very good to see you both,” she whispered.
They sat for a moment, giving each other time to gather their strength and wits, and in Miss Temple’s case to wipe away her tears and regain control over her tremulous voice. There was so much to say and so many things to do, she scoffed at her own indulgence, even if the scoff was half-heartedly blown through a sniffling nose.
“You have the advantage, Celeste,” muttered Chang hoarsely. “From the blood in the Doctor’s hair, I assume we both lack any knowledge of where we are, who guards us…even the damned time of day.”
“How long since we were taken?” asked Svenson.
Miss Temple sniffed again.
“Not long at all. But so much has happened since we spoke, since I left you—I am so sorry—I was childish and a fool—”
Svenson waved away her concerns.
“Celeste, I doubt there is time—nor does it matter—”
“It matters to me.”
“Celeste—” This was Chang, struggling to rise.
“Be quiet, the both of you,” she said, and stood up so she was taller than either of them. “I will be brief, but I must first apologize for leaving you at Plum Court. It
Chang and Svenson patted their pockets somewhat absently, not finding a thing.
“We will acquire them, it does not signify,” she said quickly, not wanting to lose her place.
“If we get out the door,” said Svenson.
“Yes, of course—the important thing is stopping our enemies’ plan.”
“And what exact plan is that?” asked Chang.
“That is the issue—I only know a portion of it. But I trust you’ve each seen a portion of your own.”
Keeping her promise to be brief, Miss Temple breathlessly launched into her tale: the St. Royale, Miss Vandaariff’s potion, the painting in the Contessa’s room, her battle with the book, her battle—in a strictly abbreviated version—with the Comte and Contessa in the coach, her train ride to Harschmort, and her journey to the theatre. Both Chang and Svenson opened their mouths to add details but she hushed them and went on—the