paled beneath its paint. âWhere did you get these?â she demanded.
âSomeone gave âem to me.â Which was strictly true. Silas had.
âNo one living,â she muttered, then seemed to decide any coin was better than none, even one taken from the eyes of the dead. âSit,â she ordered, pointing a ringed finger at a worn velvet stool by his knees.
Her hand, when it wrapped around his, was soft, powdery as a butterflyâs wing, and it flew away just as quickly to rest on her heart.
âNot a young one,â she gasped, black eyes wide. âAn old one.â Trembling, she reached across to hold his cheeks hard enough to hurt as she stared into his eyes. âOld and broken !â
Thomas tried to speak, but he could make only a muffled sound.
âSo broken!â the fortune-teller shrieked. âOld one, what happened to you ?â
CHAPTER SIX
A Fistful of Silver
T HREE STREETS AWAY, THE POWDER from the fortune-tellerâs hands was still on his cheeks, cool against his heated skin. Her last words screamed around his head.
Go back to the grave, old one! Go back to the grave!
After that, she had said no more, had only stared at Thomas with blazing terror in her eyes, the fear burning into him through her fingertips until he wrenched himself free and ran. And ran.
Old? Broken? He was perfectly young and healthy, thank you very much, and she was a fraud, just as Silas said about those people. Hadnât even let him tell her what he needed to know before she put on a performance worthyof one of those big fancy stages up in the middle of the city. A big fancy stage like heâd seen last evening.
Giving him his moneyâs worth, wasnât she?
Not hardly. Thomasâs stomach sank. Heâd left every one of his coins on her rickety tableâso that was her game. Get the mug to empty his pockets, then scare the daylights out of âim. He felt inside his pockets, just in case, but he had nothing left, not even the penny Lucy had given him for the onion, and sheâd be looking for at least a halfpenny to come back with it.
And him. Sheâd be looking for him by now.
But he couldnât be a mug. Heâd seen those letters on her sign, hadnât he? And heâd seen the sign because heâd been standing right there, eating raspberry ice.
With a girl who had appeared from nowhere, and returned there.
He needed to find her again. He could not go back to Silas and Lucy. He hadnât been planning to, though now that he thought on it, none of his plans had worked out altogether very well. If he was going to find his family, Thomas was going to have to get a great deal better at plans, and quickly.
Thereâd never been much need for him to plan anything. He had always done as Silas and Lucy bade him, and that filled all the hours he was awake. Thomas was never certain whether that was because he was a good boy,or because he had learned young indeed what happened if he did not: sent to bed without supper, or forced to scrub every last speck of dirt from the floor. Didnât much matter either way, he supposed.
But he did know someone whoâd always looked after himself, who knew the city where living people dwelled, not just dead ones.
Thomas would find Charleyâ
âThomas! Get here, this instant!â
Another plan scuppered. Thomas turned toward Lucy and watched her face shift rapidly from blotchy red anger to something much more gentle.
âThomas, whatâs happened? Have you taken ill again? You look a proper state.â She strode up to him and took his hand. âI think youâve had too much excitement these few days. Itâs not good for the humors. Come, poppet. Letâs go home.â
Let her think he was ill. Then he could think without her pestering him to talk or do his lessons, or about the onion. Indeed, she did none of those things on the way back to the little house or while she tucked him
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