Text copyright © 2017 by Jonathan Stroud
Illustrations copyright © 2017 by Kate Adams
All rights reserved. Published by Hyperion, an imprint of Disney Book Group. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. For information address New York, New York 10023.
ISBN 978-1-4847-9857-7
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Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
I: The Tomb
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
II: La Belle Dame Sans Merci
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
III: A Body in the Street
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
IV: The Siege of Portland Row
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
V: Fittes House
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
VI: The Beginning
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Glossary
Also by Jonathan Stroud
About the Author
For my family—
Gina, Isabelle, Arthur, and Louis—
who tell the best ghost stories of all
Want to hear a ghost story? That’s good. I know a few.
How about the one of the sightless blue face, pressed against the cellar window? Or the apparition of the blind man holding a cane made of children’s bones? What about the evil swan that followed me home through the lonely, rain-washed park, or the giant disembodied mouth seen opening in the center of a concrete floor? What of the milk jug that poured blood; or the empty bathtub from which choking gurgles sounded after dark? What of the orphan’s spinning bed, or the skeleton in the chimney; or the vile spectral pig, all bristles and yellow tusks, glimpsed snuffling through the dirty glass of a shower-room door?
Take your pick. I experienced them all. They represent a typical month’s work for Lockwood & Co. during that long and desperate summer. Most of them were written up in our casebook by George on the mornings after the events concerned, in between sips of scalding tea. He did this in his boxer shorts, incidentally, sitting cross-legged on the floor of our living room. It was a sight that was frankly more disturbing than all the hauntings combined.
Our black leather casebook has since been copied and filed away in the National Archives in the new Anthony Lockwood gallery. The good news about that is you don’t have to negotiate all the crushed potato chips in the pages of the original if you want to know the details of each job. The bad news? Not every case is in there. There’s one that was simply too terrible to be written down at all.
You know how it ended. Everyone does. The city was already full of it on that last cruel morning, with the rubble of Fittes House still steaming around the bodies of the lost. But the beginning? No. That’s not yet public knowledge. For the hidden story of murder, conspiracy, betrayal—yes, and ghosts—you need the account of one who survived it. For that, you have to come to me.
My name is Lucy Joan Carlyle. I talk with the living and the dead, and it sometimes gets so I can’t tell the difference anymore.
Here it is, then: the beginning of the end. Here’s me, two months ago. I’m dressed in a black jacket, skirt, and leggings, with heavy-duty boots suitable for staving in coffin lids and scrambling out of graves. My rapier’s at my belt, a holster of flares and salt-bombs is slung across my chest. There’s a spectral handprint on my jacket. My bob’s cropped shorter than before, though this doesn’t disguise where a few strands of hair have recently turned white. Otherwise, I look the same as ever. Fully equipped for psychic investigation. Doing what I do.
In the outside world, the stars were out. The day’s warmth was folded up and done. It was shortly after midnight—the time when spirits wandered and all sensible folk were tucked up safe in bed.
Me? Not so much. I was shuffling around a mausoleum with my bottom in the air.
In my defense, it has to be said that I wasn’t the only one doing this. Elsewhere in the small stone chamber, my colleagues Lockwood, George, and Holly were also on hands and knees. We had our heads low, our noses near the flagstones. We swept our candles close to walls and floor. Occasionally we stopped to press fingertips into suspicious nooks and crannies; otherwise we worked in silence. We were looking for the entrance to a grave.
“Do you lot have to bend over like that?” a voice asked. “It’s making my eyes water.”
A thin, red-haired young man was sitting above us on a granite block in the center of the room. Like the rest of our raiding party, he was all in black—in his case, whopping big boots, skinny jeans, and a turtleneck top. Unlike the rest of us, he had an enormous pair of bulbous goggles clamped across his face, giving him the look of a startled grasshopper. His name was Quill Kipps. He was readying our tomb-cracking equipment, laying out crowbars and coils of rope on the surface of the stone. He was also keeping watch, blinking at the shadows. His goggles allowed him to spot ghosts, if any were around.
“See anything, Quill?” That was Lockwood, dark hair hanging over his face. He picked with his penknife at a gap between the flagstones.
Kipps lit an oil lamp, tilting the shutters so the light stayed low. “With you in that position, I’ve seen plenty. Particularly when Cubbins comes into view. It’s like watching a beluga swimming by.”
“I meant ghosts.”
“No ghosts yet. Aside from our tame one.” He tapped a large glass jar perched alongside him on the block. Green light flared evilly within, and a spectral face of unusual hideousness materialized, moving closer through a vortex of ectoplasm.
“Tame?” A disembodied voice that only I could hear spoke in indignation. “Tame?! Let me out of here and I’ll show that scrawny idiot how tame I am!”
I sat back on my heels, brushing my bangs out of my eyes. “Best not call the skull tame, Kipps,” I said. “It doesn’t like it.”
The face in the jar bared serrated teeth. “Too right, I don’t. Lucy, tell that boggle-eyed fool that if I was out of this prison I’d suck the flesh off his bones and dance a hornpipe with his empty skin. You just tell him that.”
“Is it offended?” Kipps asked me. “I can see that horrid mouth moving.”
“Tell him!”
I hesitated. “Don’t worry,” I said. “It’s fine, really. It’s cool with it.”
“What? No, I’m not! And what’s he doing tapping my glass like I’m some kind of goldfish? I swear, when I get free of this, I’m going to catch Kipps and pull off his—”
“Lockwood,” I said, tuning out the ghost, “are you sure there’s a trapdoor in here? We haven’t got much time.”
Anthony Lockwood straightened; he was kneeling in the center of the floor, one hand holding his penknife, the other running distractedly through his hair. As usual, our leader was impeccably dressed. He wore a dark jersey instead of his long coat, and sneakers instead of his normal dress shoes; these were his only concessions to the demands of breaking-and-entering a national monument.
“You’re right, Luce.” Lockwood’s pale, thin face was as relaxed as ever, but his brow had an elegant kink in it that told me he was concerned.
“It’s been ages, and there’s still no sniff of it. What do you reckon, George?”
With a scuffling, George Cubbins levered himself up into view from behind the granite block. His black T-shirt was dirty, his glasses were skewed, and his pale hair was spiked and matted with sweat. For the last hour he’d been doing the exact same thing as the rest of us, but somehow he’d contrived to get completely covered in a layer of dust, mouse droppings, and cobwebs that no one else had even seen. Such was George’s way. “All the accounts of the burial mention a trapdoor,” he said. “We’re just not looking hard enough. Particularly Kipps, who isn’t looking at all.”
“Hey, I’m doing my job,” Kipps said. “The question is, have you done yours? We’re risking our skins tonight because you said there was a way in.”
George unwound a cobweb from his glasses. “Of course there is. They lowered her coffin through the floor into the crypt. A silver coffin. Nothing but the best for her.”
It was noticeable that George didn’t care to mention the name of the person whose tomb this was. Noticeable too that even the thought of that silver coffin gave me a hollow prickling in my gut. I got the same feeling whenever I glanced at the shelf at the far end of the chamber—and looked at what was sitting there.
It was an iron bust of a woman in late middle age. She had an imperious and austere expression, with hair swept back above a high forehead. The nose was sharp and aquiline, the mouth thin, the eyes astute. It was not a pleasant face, exactly, but strong and hard and watchful, and we knew it very well indeed. It was the same face as the one on our postage stamps and on the covers of our agency manuals, a face that had shadowed us from early childhood and entered all our dreams.
Many remarkable things had been said about Marissa Fittes, the first and greatest psychic investigator of us all. How, together with her partner, Tom Rotwell, she had devised most of the ghost-hunting techniques that operatives like us still used. How she had improvised her first rapier from a snapped-off iron railing; how she’d conversed with ghosts as easily as if they were flesh and blood. How she’d created the first psychic detection agency, and how, when she died, half of London came to watch as her coffin was carried from Westminster Abbey to the Strand, the streets strewn with lavender flowers, and all the agents in the city marching along behind. How the bells in every church had rung as she was interred beneath her mausoleum, which was still maintained by the Fittes Agency as a special shrine.
Remarkable things…
The final one was that we didn’t believe she was buried there at all.
The Fittes mausoleum, in which we stood, lay at the east end of the Strand in central London. It was a compact, high-ceilinged chamber, roughly oval in shape, built of stone and swathed in shadow. Aside from the big sarcophagus-sized block of granite in the center of the room (which had the single word FITTES carved into the top), the place was empty. There were no windows, and the iron doors that led to the street were closed and tight.
Somewhere beyond those doors stood two sentries. They were only kids, but they had pistols and might have used them had they heard us, so we had to go carefully. On the upside, the place was clean and dry and smelled of fresh lavender, and there weren’t any obvious body parts lying underfoot, which instantly made it preferable to most of the other places we’d been that week.
But at the same time, there didn’t seem to be anywhere for a trapdoor to hide.
Our lanterns flickered. Blackness hung over our heads like a witch’s cloak.
“Well, all we can do is keep calm, keep quiet, and keep looking,” Lockwood said. “Unless anyone’s got a better suggestion.”
“I’ve got one.” Holly Munro had been zealously combing the floor at the far end of the room. Now she got to her feet and joined us, light and silent as a cat. Like the rest of us, she was in stealth mode: she had her long dark hair clipped back in a ponytail, and wore a zip-up top, skirt, and leggings. I could go on about how well the all-black getup suited her, but why bother? With Holly, that was a given. If she’d gone around wearing nothing but a dustbin suspended from her shoulders by a pair of polka-dotted suspenders, she’d have somehow made it look chic.
“I think we need a fresh perspective,” she said. “Lucy, can’t the skull help at all?”
I shrugged. “I’ll try, Hol. But you know what mood it’s in.”
Over in the jar, the translucent face was still talking animatedly. I could just see the old brown skull clamped to the base of the glass beneath it.
I let myself tune back in to what it was saying.
“…and eat them. Then I’ll freeze his toenails off. That’ll fix him.”
“Oh, you’re not still going on about Kipps!” I said. “I thought you’d finished ages ago.”
The face in the jar blinked at me. “Weren’t you even listening?”
“No.”
“Typical. I went into all kinds of grim, inventive detail just for you.”
“Save it. We can’t find the entrance. Can you help us out?”
“Why should I? You won’t believe anything I say.”
“That’s not true. It’s because we do sort of believe you that we’re standing here right now.”
The skull snorted rudely. “If you took my word in any conventional sense, you’d be sitting at home with your feet up, rotting your innards with tea and chocolate biscuits. But no. You have to ‘double-check’ my story.”
“Are you surprised? You say that Marissa Fittes isn’t dead, but actually alive and well and pretending to be her supposed granddaughter, Penelope Fittes. The same Penelope Fittes who is head of the Fittes Agency and probably the most powerful person in London. That’s quite a claim to make. You’ll forgive us if we need to check it for ourselves.”
The face rolled its eyes. “Piffle. Know what this is an example of? Skullism.”
“What nonsense are you spouting now?”
“You’ve heard of racism. You’ve heard of sexism. Well, this is skullism, pure and simple. You’re judging me by my outward appearance. You doubt my word solely because I’m a skull, lurking in a jar of slime-green plasm. Admit it!”
I took a deep breath. This was a skull known far and wide for its outrageous whoppers and virtuoso fibbing. To say it sometimes stretched the truth would be like saying George sometimes stretched the seat of his pants when tying his shoelaces. On the flip side, the ghost had saved my life more than once and—on certain important matters—hadn’t always lied. “That’s an interesting point,” I said, “and I look forward to discussing it with you later. In the meantime, help me out. We’re looking for the entrance to a crypt. Do you see a ring or handle?”
“No.”
“Do you see a lever?”
“Nope.”
“Do you see a pulley, winch, or any other mechanism for opening a hidden trapdoor?”
“No. Of course not. You’re getting desperate now.”
I sighed. “Okay. I get the message. So there’s no door here.”
“Oh, of course there’s a door,” the ghost said. “Why didn’t you ask me? It’s obvious enough from up here.”
I relayed this to the others. Holly and Lockwood acted as one. They vaulted up onto the block beside Kipps. Lockwood grabbed one of the lanterns and held it out in front of him. He and Holly both rotated, scanning the floor, faces locked in concentration. The light washed slowly over the flagstones like water, spilling up against the base of the walls.
“This is pitiful,” the skull said. “I saw it straight off, and I don’t have an eyeball to call my own. Well, I’m sorry, but you’re not getting any more clues from—”
“There!” Holly grasped Lockwood’s arm. He held the lantern steady. “There!” she said. “See that little flagstone set inside the bigger one? The big one is the trapdoor. Pull up the small stone and we’ll find the ring or handle hidden underneath!”
George and I ran over, bent close to where she pointed. As soon as she said it, I knew that she was right.
??
?Brilliant, Holly,” Lockwood said. “That must be it. Tools ready, everyone.”
It was at times like this that Lockwood & Co. was at its fluent best. Knives were brought out, and the cement around the smaller stone cut free. We levered it up with crowbars; Lockwood pulled it aside. Sure enough, a hinged bronze ring lay beneath, set into the larger stone. While George, Holly, and I loosened the edges of this stone, Lockwood and Kipps tied ropes around the ring, testing and double-testing the knots, making sure they could take the strain. Lockwood was everywhere at once, softly giving orders, helping with every task. Energy crackled off him, spurring us all on.
“Isn’t anyone going to thank me?” The skull watched disgustedly from its jar. “Thought not. Good thing I’m not in the business of holding my breath.”
Within minutes we were in position. Lockwood and Kipps stood by the first rope; they would lift the stone. On the opposite side, the second rope hung slack. George and I held this—it was our job to support the flagstone once it was lifted, and help lower it quietly back onto the floor. In the center, by the ring, Holly knelt ready with the crowbars.
The room was still. Up on the wall, our lantern light quivered on the iron head of Marissa Fittes. It was as if she were watching us, her eyes glittering with malevolent life.
At moments of maximum tension, Lockwood always made it his business to be the calmest of all. He smiled at us. “Everyone ready?” he asked. “Right—let’s go.”
He and Kipps pulled. At once, smoothly and without noise, the flagstone moved. It lifted up as if on oiled hinges, and a waft of chill air rose from the crack beneath.
Holly pushed the crowbars under it in case the others faltered, but there was no need. With surprising swiftness, Lockwood and Kipps pulled the flagstone upright. Now it was George and I who had to support its weight. Our rope went taut; we took the strain.
The hinged slab wasn’t nearly as heavy as I’d have guessed—perhaps it was some special hollow stone. Slowly we began to lower it on the other side.
“Set it down gently!” Lockwood hissed. “No noise!”
We eased the flagstone down. It met the ground with a sound like a mouse sighing.