above the sound of steam cycles purring past and a boy selling hot pies.
Imogen visibly reined in her excitement, putting on a dutifully sympathetic expression. “But you don’t.”
“I feel a bit ashamed. It’s like by leaving I said they weren’t good enough for me, and that is so far from the truth …”
“But you had no choice. Your Grandmamma Holmes took you away.”
Evelina didn’t reply, but studied the sun slanting across the front of the theater.
“In any event, you did what made sense to you at the time. How could it not?”
Evelina laced her arm through her friend’s. “There were things I lost. I didn’t see it at the time.”
One of the steam cycles streaked through a puddle, sending up a cloud of pigeons.
“Your friends and family? They’re not lost. They’re right here.”
She thought of Gran again. Maybe it would be all right, if she could just see her. Just hug her again and chat over a cup of that strong, strong tea. “It’s not just the people. It’s such a different life, Imogen. I was one of the Flying Coopers. I miss the circus itself. There’s a moment in the routine when you’re holding nothing but air. The crowd may roar, but all you hear is an absolute quiet. All you can count on is your own equilibrium and that silence to carry you to the bar of the trapeze. It’s life or death.”
Imogen gave her a sharp look. “I’ve never heard you say that.”
Possibly because she had been too young to be a performer when she’d first been part of the show. Not legally, anyhow, and she’d always been careful of saying too much. Evelina’s gaze slid back to the marquis. “I don’t think I wanted to admit that I missed it. Leaving was like taking a knife to a limb.”
She started toward the ticket booth, Imogen matching her step. The carriage had dropped them off at the shops a few streets away and was scheduled to pick them up in two hours. With luck, no one at Hilliard House would be the wiser about where they’d spent the afternoon. Imogen broke into her thoughts. “What will you do if you meet Magnus on the street?”
Evelina had told her about last night, though nothing about the magic she shared with Nick. That wasn’t entirely her secret to tell.
The thought of Magnus blackened everything, like a cloud coasting in front of the sun. “For now, I’m not going anywhere alone.”
“And for the long term?”
A young man turned to look at Imogen and walked into a lamppost. She seemed entirely unaware of it.
“He’s got something to do with the murders. I’m sure of it.” She wasn’t about to say that Lord Bancroft was tangled up in everything as well, not until she absolutely had to. Imogen was his daughter, after all.
“So Magnus is part of the investigation.” Though she kept her words soft, Imogen’s voice was filled with excitement. “It might take some doing, but we’ll get him.”
As far as Evelina could tell, they weren’t getting anyone or anywhere, just coming up with more questions. “If my Uncle Sherlock were doing this …”
Imogen poked her in the arm. “He’d be coming at the problem in his own way. You have resources he can’t touch. He might have even been eaten by that wretched dragon, although he undoubtedly would have deduced who it had for breakfast three weeks ago by the residue stuck in its fangs. Never mind your uncle. Look at everything we’ve learned so far.”
“Which at the moment is a lot of unrelated facts.” They hurried to avoid a steam dray moving too fast for the crowded street.
Imogen waved a hand. “That’s the trouble with gathering truth. It’s never neat and tidy, whatever that nice Dr. Watson writes. I still want to know what kind of goods that importer was receiving. There was nothing there but empty crates and mechanical jumble.” The strained look was back on Imogen’s features.
Evelina frowned. “Are you sure you want to be involved with my investigation?”
“Of course I do!”
Imogen sounded almost testy, which wasn’t like her at all. Evelina would have said more, but they’d stopped at the ticket booth. It was coin operated, the clockwork ticket seller inside made to look like a tabby cat wearing a green bow tie and bowler. Imogen fed her shillings into the slot and pulled the lever. The cat’s tail waved frantically, a paw lifted the bowler, and a ticket shot out of a slot in the front of the booth surrounded by embossed gold scrollwork. Imogen took her ticket, and Evelina repeated the procedure.
The ticket read: EQUESTRIAN DRAMA: THE KNIGHTS OF TATIANA VICTORIOUS OVER THE FORCES OF KING OBERON. Evelina felt a twinge of relief. At least they weren’t still doing Waterloo. There were only so many times one could watch Wellington defeat Old Boney, especially decades after the fact.
“I think we’re too late to see the battle,” Evelina said. “That’s all right, though. I prefer the second half.”
The afternoon performance was well attended, but the theater was large and there were plenty of places to sit. Imogen insisted on finding seats in the lowest tier of boxes hanging right next to the sawdust ring. Evelina angled her chair, using the curtains on the box to shadow her face. She wondered how many of the troupe would recognize her, or her them, and wasn’t sure she was ready for that moment.
Imogen gave her a sly smile. “I’m looking forward to seeing this Nick of yours. Is he really so very indomitable?”
“He’d love to think so.”
The next act was setting up. A young girl was walking along the seats selling ices. Evelina wasn’t hungry, but she could taste the cold sweetness in her memory. The circus smelled the same—churned dust, animals, the lingering sharpness of sweat. A sense of displacement swamped her, skewing her perception of time and place and leaving her lonely as a ghost that has outlived its century.
Imogen pulled out a dainty white leather case that unclasped on one side and popped up to reveal collapsible opera glasses. She studied the faces in the other boxes. “I see the Whitneys, but no one else we know. Oh, wait. They’re leaving.”
That was a relief, but Evelina had barely unclenched her shoulders when, moments later, the show began. Old Ploughman strode forth, arms raised as if to conjure. He stopped in the middle of the ring, bowing to one side of the auditorium, then the other. The knees and elbows of his suit were a little shinier with wear than Evelina remembered, the fit a little tighter in the waist, but his grandiloquence still rolled like thunder. “Gentlemen! Beautiful ladies!” his introduction began.
The sound of his voice straightened Evelina’s spine, as if she were still bound to his orders.
Just as Ploughman finished his prologue, Maximilian the Fierce paraded his lions and tigers through the ring, the cats fluid as tawny liquid as he jumped them over his stick. Evelina recognized the old, scarred lion and shivered a little in her seat. Xerxes was many things, but the padding giant could never be called completely tamed.
No sooner had the tip of the last feline tail disappeared then the Maharaja appeared and made Bessie the elephant stand on her hind legs and balance a ball on her trunk. That was the odd thing with elephants—why would a creature that big ever do anything for a mere human? And yet they did, so they must have their reasons. They were complex beasts.
When Evelina had been no more than eight or nine, she had hidden one night in the soft warmth of the elephant’s pen. It had been after a bad day—she’d done something wrong and Gran had scolded, and she’d leaned up against Bessie and cried and cried. The elephant had wound its trunk around her, as gentle with little Evie as if she had been Bessie’s own calf, rocking her gently from side to side until she was all but asleep. The memory pierced her, fixing her to the past with links of unbreakable sweetness.
By the time the elephant left the ring, the Maharaja and his monkey swaying on her back, Evelina was clutching her handkerchief in a tight, moist ball. Imogen gripped her other hand.
The riders came next, two bay horses side by side. Young men stood in the saddles, and atop their shoulders stood Nick. His dark hair streamed behind him, showing the clean lines of his face. He raised his hands triumphantly in the air, the brilliant silks of his costume rippling in the breeze created by the horses’ steady canter. The crowd cheered, the sheer bravado of the cavaliers a joy to behold.
Once they made a circuit of the ring, another horse pranced into the arena. This mare was slightly smaller, gray with a flowing mane and tail bound in colorful ribbons. Nick called something from his perch, and the horse reared, dancing for a moment with her front hooves churning the air. In one glance, Evelina knew this would be Nick’s special horse. He had always trained his mounts to do that trick—sometimes it was almost as if he had the