The clerk did not appreciate Elora’s implication, which was precisely why it landed. His jaw tightened just enough to show the hit, though his voice stayed polished. “Brass Lantern does not release vehicles irresponsibly,” he said. “Mr. Bell paid for privacy, after hours service, and the waiver for self return. That is unusual, but not forbidden.”
“Unusual,” Gears echoed. “Like a brick through a wedding cake.”
Marcus pressed before the man could recover his balance. The question drew a pause. A real one this time.
“No,” the clerk admitted. “There were two with him at pickup. One drove. One remained inside the carriage. At return, only the driver was seen.” He hesitated again, eyes flicking once toward the counter staff. “Mr. Bell himself was described as tall, pale gloves, dark coat, hat low over the face. Deliberately forgettable.”
Elora’s suggestion of internal help hung over the polished lobby like a draft. The clerk disliked it, but not enough to deny it outright. “The coach was returned late. Inspected in dim light. If someone was careless, I will discover who.”
Hwicce, meanwhile, took stock of the room. Two front guards outside, one heavier man pretending to sort ledgers behind the far desk, and another near the inner hall who stood too straight to be ordinary staff. Brass Lantern’s muscle wore vests instead of coats, but it was muscle all the same. Not a war party. Enough to make trouble costly.
Then, from somewhere deeper in the building, a raised voice snapped through the calm.
“What do you mean fourteen is being discussed in the lobby?”
Piero’s smile returned at once.
“Well,” he murmured, “that sounds promising.”
“Unusual,” Gears echoed. “Like a brick through a wedding cake.”
Marcus pressed before the man could recover his balance. The question drew a pause. A real one this time.
“No,” the clerk admitted. “There were two with him at pickup. One drove. One remained inside the carriage. At return, only the driver was seen.” He hesitated again, eyes flicking once toward the counter staff. “Mr. Bell himself was described as tall, pale gloves, dark coat, hat low over the face. Deliberately forgettable.”
Elora’s suggestion of internal help hung over the polished lobby like a draft. The clerk disliked it, but not enough to deny it outright. “The coach was returned late. Inspected in dim light. If someone was careless, I will discover who.”
Hwicce, meanwhile, took stock of the room. Two front guards outside, one heavier man pretending to sort ledgers behind the far desk, and another near the inner hall who stood too straight to be ordinary staff. Brass Lantern’s muscle wore vests instead of coats, but it was muscle all the same. Not a war party. Enough to make trouble costly.
Then, from somewhere deeper in the building, a raised voice snapped through the calm.
“What do you mean fourteen is being discussed in the lobby?”
Piero’s smile returned at once.
“Well,” he murmured, “that sounds promising.”
