“Wot’s yer answer, then, miss?”

“Who gave this to you? Where and when?”

He gave an awkward bow. “I canna tell you that, miss, as I don’t rightly know. I was on th’ underground, and someone come b’hind me and give it to me. ’E ’ad a gun at m’neck and tole me not to turn around. An’ ’e give me the directions.”

“But then how are you to bring my response?” I asked suspiciously. “You said you must wait for my answer.”

He shrugged and said, “I’m to walk down Bond-street and to be wearin’ my cap iffen ye said aye, and iffen ye said nay, I’m not to be wearin’ it.”

“Were you given any further instructions?”

“On’y that I’m t’walk down th’ street as ’e said when Big Ben calls noon.”

I glanced at the clock. It was almost ten. “Very well. My answer is yes, so you may wear your cap on your walk down Bond-street at noon today.”

“An’ I’m told t’tell you there’s t’be further ’structions if yer answer’s aye.”

“I suspected that might be the case,” I said dryly.

I released the messenger and contemplated following him. But that would likely have been an exercise in foolishness. How would I know who was watching Bond, the busiest shopping street in the city? There would be hundreds of people in the vicinity at noon.

I decided to make other plans. I’d wait here, of course, for the further instructions. In the meantime, I tried to quell my worries over Miss Stoker’s condition. If she was being held for the ransom of the diadem, then she’d be safe . . . at least until I appeared with it.

Taking a deep breath, I contacted the museum and notified Dylan to come to my house and to bring “the item which he notified me about yesterday” posthaste.

Then I washed up and dressed, choosing my clothing carefully. Although I’d worn split skirts last evening, I’d found them heavy and ungainly during the activities of the night. Thus, today I disdained my normal corset and instead wore a much shorter and less rigid one, which would allow me to be more active without becoming short of breath in the event I had to run again. I dressed in slim-fitting trousers with a simple shirt and vest. I stuffed a variety of implements into a large satchel and twisted my long hair into a single braid that I wrapped into a knot at the back of my neck.

Despite my devastating setback last evening, I was still convinced the individual was a woman. And I still wasn’t convinced that she wasn’t Lady Cosgrove-Pitt.

I’d give her the diadem. And I’d rescue Evaline.

And I’d unmask the Ankh in the process.

Now all I had to do was to wait for the Ankh to make her next move.

Miss Stoker

In the Shadow of Sekhmet

I smelled fish and smoke and inhaled dust, and I couldn’t move my arms. Slowly, I opened my eyes to find myself in an unfamiliar environment. For a moment I was confused . . . then the pounding in my temple, a dull ache in my side, and the sight of blood crusted on my tunic reminded me how I came to be here.

I had gone back in the building to help Amunet and came face-to-face with Hathor. He pointed a gun at me, and I launched myself at him. We collided and fell to the floor. His gun fired and missed, but by the time I scrambled to my feet, Bastet was there, helping me upright by yanking my loose braid. They dragged me out of the hallway and into the altar room. The chamber was engulfed in smoke and patches of flames.

The dais had walls, and a loud engine roared above. Heavy cables reached down through the open rooftop, pulling the steps up to become accordion-like walls. The gun pointing at my head forced me inside this alcove. I joined the statue of Sekhmet next to the altar. An unbound Amunet sat in a small motor-chamber above, piloting what had become an airship up and out of the roofless building.

The Ankh and the other male guard were nowhere to be seen.

There was a seam at the corner of two walls. I dove for it, but Hathor dragged me back onto the base of the “ship.” He raised his hand, the metal of the firearm gleaming, and when it came back down, I didn’t duck fast enough . . .

I had no idea how much time had passed since I’d been knocked out. I was no longer in the odd airship nor the building that had been on fire. No one would know where I was or how to find me.

To add to the situation, my wrists were bound in front of me and my ankles chained to . . .

The statue of Sekhmet.

The Ankh’s intention was unpleasantly clear.

The statue loomed over me, gleaming faint gold in the dim light. As I looked up at the lion-headed goddess, I couldn’t forget the image of a battered, devastated body, thudding and trembling helplessly against those golden arms.

Della Exington was dead.

And I’d been unable to save her. Not because I couldn’t get there in time, but because I couldn’t make myself do it. I’d been frozen and paralyzed. Weak.

I’d dragged myself out of it. But it had been too late by then. Remorse and guilt flooded me. Then deep, burning fury. Tears filled my eyes, bitter and stinging.

I had no right to call myself a Venator, a vampire hunter.

My great-great-aunt Victoria had sacrificed everything for her calling, even staking the husband she loved after he was turned UnDead.

I couldn’t even ignore a bit of blood in order to save a young woman’s life.

I shifted and felt the dull throb in my side. It had stopped bleeding even before Miss Holmes and I escaped from the opium chamber. But when I ran back through the building to help Amunet, it started oozing again. On a normal person, this wound would have been fatal. At the very least, debilitating. But for me, it wasn’t the injury or even the pain that had caused my paralysis.

Footsteps approached and the sound brought me out of my stupor. A tall, slender figure cloaked in an enveloping black wrap appeared. This time, the Ankh was garbed in female clothing: skirts and a poke bonnet so deep it shielded his or her face.

“Miss Stoker. I’m delighted to see that you haven’t bled to death.”

I could reach him. Her. Grab her by the leg and yank. She had to be unsteady on those tiny hourglass heels. Though it was around my ankle, my chain was long enough to wrap around her throat, to subdue her . . .

She stepped back as if she’d read my mind. Blast it.

“Your knife-throwing skills are quite good,” I said. “Traveling circus, perhaps? Was your mother the fat lady?”

The Ankh stilled, looking at me from behind the bonnet. “You’ll be pleased to know your partner has agreed to bring me Sekhmet’s diadem in exchange for your person.”

“Mina Holmes is no fool. Once you have the diadem, then what? Who will be your next victim?”

I saw the flash of a smile and the impression of two gleaming eyes. “That is a concern, I must admit. Nonetheless, I’m certain some solution will occur to me.” A low, grating laugh told me she already had one. And I wasn’t going to like it.

Despite her clothing, I still couldn’t settle on whether the person before me was a woman who dressed in male clothing, or a man currently garbed as a female. “And when do you plan to execute this wily plan?”

“Tonight. The timing is most auspicious, for today is the anniversary of when I first learned of the power of Sekhmet. Five years ago, I stumbled upon the artifact which sent me on this path.”

If Miss Holmes were here, she’d probably try to lecture and deduce the Ankh into submission. My moment of wry humor vanished as quickly as it had come. How the blazes was I going to escape my chain before my partner arrived, and how was I going to bring the Ankh down with me?

“Very well, then,” said my host. She carried something long and silver and slender and moved closer. “Now

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