Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
The Chemickal Marriage

The Chemickal Marriage

Titel: The Chemickal Marriage Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Gordon Dahlquist
Vom Netzwerk:
vestibule and brusquely pulled Trooste up. He whipped aside the curtain to the baggage compartment. ‘Stay here.’
    Trooste peered past Chang down the corridor. ‘While you do what?’
    ‘No.’ Chang pushed Trooste into the compartment and whisked the curtain shut.
    ‘What if this wager of yours goes sour?’ protested Trooste. ‘Where am I?’
    ‘On a train to Harschmort, as you wanted. Don’t make any noise.’
    At the corridor’s end he turned in time to see Trooste’s head duck from sight. Chang sighed – there was nothing to be done about it now – and stepped through.
    At a flash of white he raised his stick, blocking a forearm reaching for his neck, and dodged the other way, into the arms of a second waiting man. A hard elbow and this second man’s grip gave way, and Chang chopped the walking stick into the first man’s face, knocking him back on his heels. The man overbalanced, his back to the open boarding staircase. Chang thrust the stick into Michel Gorine’s grasping hands, and retrieved him before he could topple out under the iron wheels. Behind Chang, Mr Cunsher exhaled painfully and rubbed his abdomen.
    ‘A pair of fools!’ Chang shouted over the noise of the wheels. Gorine jabbed his hand towards the rear of the train with the subtlety of a puppet show.
    ‘Jack Pfaff! I know!’ Chang waved them closer so as not to shout. ‘Have you followed him, or were you on the train already?’
    ‘From the Thermæ,’ replied Cunsher. ‘He hasn’t seen us. No idea of his intentions.’
    ‘Have you seen Celeste?’ The question sparked an apprehensive look between the men. ‘
Tell
me.’
    ‘Beg pardon – the noise is impossible …’ Cunsher put his mouth to Chang’s ear and with characteristic efficiency related his progress since Chang had thrown the rock at Pfaff in the square: following Pfaff, eventually to the Thermæ, Miss Temple’s freeing of Gorine, Cunsher’s intention to follow Pfaff, Miss Temple’s wilful disappearance.
    ‘We did not realize she was gone until it was too late, yet, with Pfaff likely to reunite with his patroness, he seemed actually the surest way to locate the young lady.’
    ‘Headstrong idiot,’ muttered Chang.
    ‘Never met a creature like her,’ agreed Gorine. ‘
Barking
.’
    His smile of agreement wilted before Chang’s grim stare.
    ‘Resourceful young lady,’ observed Cunsher.
    Gorine nodded with vigour, then – wanting to appear useful – craned hishead to make sure no one was coming to disturb them, only to realize that Cunsher and Chang had each already positioned their bodies to watch the corridor without being seen. Gorine pulled back, chagrined. He smoothed the lank hair from his eyes. Chang said nothing to alleviate the man’s discomfort. How many times in the perfumed parlours of the Old Palace had Michel Gorine kept him at bay, sending Angelique off with another customer?
    ‘What do you know of Drusus Schoepfil?’ Chang asked.
    ‘Vandaariff’s nephew and heir,’ replied Cunsher, as if it were a common fact. ‘Apparently
he
questioned Miss Temple at the Thermæ –’
    ‘Wait!’ Gorine cried. ‘In the Old Palace, Bronque always had another man with him – they used our tunnel to the Institute – we thought he was some minor royal.’
    ‘He’d be flattered to hear it,’ said Chang. ‘But it is with Drusus Schoepfil that Madelaine Kraft has sought protection.’
    ‘Impossible! They ransacked the Old Palace! Bronque nearly broke my jaw!’
    ‘She’s a pragmatic woman.’ Chang gripped Gorine’s arm. ‘What would she offer Schoepfil in return?’
    ‘Information about his uncle?’ ventured Cunsher.
    Gorine shook his head. ‘Robert Vandaariff never went near the Old Palace.’
    Not Vandaariff, Chang realized, yet how many times had Mrs Kraft hosted the Comte d’Orkancz?
Those
were the secrets to tempt Schoepfil … and perhaps to fuel her own revenge.
    He took hold of a wall bracket and swung his body down the open stairs, face into the wind. Packington Station would not be far. Would Pfaff leave the train? Would the Contessa board it? He pulled himself inside. ‘In the next baggage compartment you will find Professor Trooste, late of the Royal Institute –’
    ‘Augustus Trooste!’ spat Gorine. ‘That shameless fat sponge –’
    ‘He was present at Mrs Kraft’s restoration, and may be able to help. Hide him. I will tackle Pfaff.’
    ‘Is that wise?’ asked Cunsher. ‘If we interrupt his plans

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher