A supernatural romance about the powers that lie in the shadows of the mind, perfect for fans of Sarah Rees Brennan, Alyxandra Harvey, and Libba Bray.
At the turn of the twentieth century, Spiritualism and séances are all the rage—even in the scholarly town of Cambridge, England. While mediums dupe the grief-stricken, a group of local fringe scientists seeks to bridge the gap to the spirit world by investigating the dark corners of the human mind.
Each running from a shadowed past, Kate, Asher, and Elsie take refuge within the walls of Summerfield College. But their peace is soon shattered by the discovery of a dead body nearby. Is this the work of a flesh-and-blood villain, or is something otherworldly at play? This unlikely trio must illuminate what the scientists have not, and open a window to secrets taken to the grave—or risk joining the spirit world themselves.
Release date:
August 27, 2013
Publisher:
Knopf Books for Young Readers
Print pages:
352
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Chapter 1 Cambridge, England August 1901 When Kate Poole was twelve, her body had folded easily into the medium’s throne. Her limbs had been shorter, her joints more elastic. In those days she stayed cool and supple while waiting for the hymns to end. Now, two years later, she was a leggy foal contorted in the womb, straining for freedom and the first breath of life. Perspiration soaked her chemise, and her limbs twitched and tingled. After an eternity of singing, Mrs. Martineau’s voice rose to a crescendo. In response, the sitters sang more passionately. Kate reached back to slowly lift the hinged panel, inhaled a lovely breath of fresh air, and pushed her head and arms out of the hidden compartment. Once her hands found the thick support bar on the back of the medium’s chair, she slid her legs out and pulled herself up to a low crouch. “Hand in Hand with Angels” drew to a close and the great chair creaked as Mrs. Martineau’s body began to convulse. The sudden movement quieted the singers to a low hum. When the room fell silent, Mrs. Martineau spoke in her singsong trance voice. “Dear friends, my spirit guide beckons. Do not be afraid. She wishes to show herself.” Kate heard the rustling of fabric as the sitters leaned forward. This was what they had come to see, after all. She clung to the back of the chair, bouncing gently on the balls of her tingling feet. “The spirit will walk among you,” continued the medium. “Do not be alarmed if you feel her touch. She reaches for the souls of your loved ones. She intends you no harm.” Kate rolled her eyes. The audience loved to feel the spirit touch--the gentlemen, especially. Some of them liked to feel back, and there wasn’t much Kate could do to stop them. All part of the show, as Mrs. Martineau would say. The medium shuddered rhythmically, rising off her seat a few inches as she did so. In response, Kate slowly rose behind Mrs. Martineau’s head, hidden by the vast hood of the woman’s white cloak. After another spell of twitching, Mrs. Martineau moaned dramatically and collapsed onto the table. At the same moment Kate stood at her full height behind the chair. The audience gasped. They always did, even when they had come many times before. Kate was a ghastly sight in the dim light sputtering from the gas fixtures--she knew this because Mrs. Martineau had once brought a mirror to the parlor so she could see her reflection in the near darkness. When Kate had looked in the glass and seen her thin frame draped in a shimmering, transparent shroud, her mouth fell open. The vision was perfectly ghoulish. The next bit was her favorite. She pulled the shroud to her shoulders, revealing her face. More than one lady cried out. A gentleman cleared his throat. Again there was a rustling of fabric as people shifted in their seats. Kate well knew how her brown eyes, rimmed with kohl, appeared as gaping holes against the unnatural paleness of her face. In that moment she didn’t care that the luminous powder wrecked her skin, or that the wig made her scalp itch and sweat. Nor did it shame her that the costume--a gauzy wrap draped over the merest of underpinnings--left her exposed and shivering. In the dim light of the parlor, she was a wraith from a horror tale. And she held them all under her spell. Kate arched her back and began the slow movements of the spirit dance. The ladies rarely gave her trouble. They shivered at her touch and occasionally giggled when she sighed in their ears, but they never laid a hand on her. Once a lady had cried, “She reeks of onions!” and Mrs. Martineau had given Kate a good thumping when the sitters were gone. Thereafter she could take only bread and milk before the séances. The gentlemen were altogether different. She could almost smell it on them--their longing to touch her. A few managed to keep their hands to themselves, but most had to claim a piece of her before she moved on. Some ran fingers through the long hair of her wig or stroked her bare arm; others probed underneath the shroud in a furtive search for her thighs. Though she’d long ago ceased to be shocked by their hot breath and wandering hands, she would never find it pleasing to be fondled by whiskery old fools. She often felt a powerful urge to pinch them back, but all she could do was step lightly away, sighing her sorrow as spirits were wont to do. That night her dance lacked its usual elegance, for her right foot was still prickly and awkward. This sluggishness seemed to work to her advantage, however, for the men committed no worse acts than light pawing. The two gentlemen placed at the medium’s left--attending for the first time that evening--did nothing at all. In fact, they barely looked her way as she floated past them. Finally she returned to her place behind Mrs. Martineau. When the woman lifted her head from the table and sat up straight, Kate drew her arms together and crouched, as though melting into the darkness behind her. But just as she lifted the panel to the compartment, Mrs. Martineau spoke. “My spirit guide has encountered a very powerful presence with us tonight. My friends, the spirit of Frederic Stanton has crossed the dark chasm to join us.” Frederic Stanton? Kate dropped the panel, and the clatter echoed throughout the room. “What the devil?” She flinched at the exclamation. Robert Eliot was the medium’s patron, and as such he always had the best seat at the table. The best angle for groping Kate, too. Missus would not be pleased that Kate’s bumbling had so provoked him. “This is utterly ridiculous,” said a soft voice near her. She thought it must be one of the aloof gentlemen. “Mr. Wakeham,” the man continued, “would you be so kind as to turn up the gas so everyone might see?” “No!” bellowed Mrs. Martineau. “You will do great harm to the spirit!” Roused by this sudden burst of anger, Kate lifted the panel again and thrust her feet into the compartment. A moment later a burst of gaslight brightened the room and a pair of hands seized her shoulders, pulling her to her feet. “Here’s the confederate, Thompson. Hiding in the chair, of all places.” Kate gasped as the wig was plucked from her head. She craned her neck to see whose hand gripped her upper arm. She did not know his name, but it was the younger of the two newcomers. “I say,” cried Eliot, puffing his broad chest. “You promised you would not disrupt the meeting.” He directed his words to the grey-bearded fellow, her captor’s companion. Mrs. Martineau looked from the strangers to her patron. “Who is this man, Mr. Eliot?” The bearded gentleman clasped his hands at his chest. “I beg your pardon, madam. I am Oliver Thompson. And Wakeham”--he gestured toward the man holding Kate--“is my colleague. We represent the Society for Metaphysical Research. Mr. Eliot encouraged us to attend tonight.” Mrs. Martineau’s mouth twisted as she glanced at Mr. Eliot. “You invited skeptics here tonight?” “They expressed an interest.” Eliot’s forehead gleamed with perspiration. “I’ve told them of your spirit manifestations, and they wished to observe. I meant to finally give them proof of the spirit’s ability to communicate after death . . . but it’s all gone horribly wrong.” “Thompson and I suspected fraud, Mrs. Martineau, and now we have exposed it for all to see,” said Mr. Wakeham, his fingernails still cutting into Kate’s shoulder. “No, you have perpetrated a fraud, Mr. Wakeham!” cried Mrs. Martineau. “You and your colleague brought this girl here tonight. You planted her in an attempt to discredit me.” The medium paused, her expression growing bolder as her favored sitters sputtered their outrage. She raised her hand to still their voices. “I sensed something was not quite right, but I could not put my finger on the source of the disturbance . . . until now.” Mr. Thompson lifted his hands. “This is ridiculous. Eliot, how can you countenance this woman’s deception?” “It seems the girl has tricked us all,” said Eliot weakly. Mrs. Martineau took a deep breath and looked calmly around the table. “Ladies and gentlemen--my dear friends--I have been deceived along with you. These men have tricked me and now they most certainly will slander me.” She staggered back, eyelids fluttering. Mr. Eliot stepped to her side, offering his arm, and she smiled weakly at him before turning back to her audience. “I beg you all to leave me now. A dark presence has defiled our circle, and it will take some time for me to recover.” With a limp hand she beckoned her maid, who herded the sitters out. Mrs. Martineau sank back into her throne, eyes closed. Mr. Wakeham’s grip finally eased, and Kate shrugged him off to step toward the medium. Mr. Thompson sighed. “I think we’re finished here. Shall we push on, Wakeham?” “Take your little pawn with you, Mr. Thompson,” called Mrs. Martineau softly. What? Kate stared at her, but the woman did not open her eyes. “Surely you are mistaken, dear lady,” said Eliot, swabbing his forehead with a handkerchief. “This can’t be the work of the Metaphysical Society.” “He’s correct, of course. We’ve never seen the girl before.” Mr. Wakeham’s upper lip curled as he tossed the wig to Kate. “Eliot, I assume you’re coming with us?” “Ah, well . . .” The man shuffled his feet. “You two go on without me. I’ll see you next week.” The instant the two gentlemen passed through the doorway, Mr. Eliot lurched toward Kate. “I believed in you,” he said thickly, as if choked by emotion. “You seemed made of air--a creature from another world.” “If you thought me a creature of air, why’d you grope me every chance you got?” She was pleased to see him wince at that. After a moment he took a step closer, his eyes glistening. “Did you . . .” He cleared his throat. “Have you come at Mrs. Martineau’s bidding, as my colleagues suggested?” Kate risked a glance at the medium. Only one eye was open, but it was trained on Kate and the message was clear. Don’t even try it. “I came on my own,” Kate whispered. Eliot’s fists tightened. “You should be made to pay for your deceit.” “She’s not worth the trouble, Robert,” Mrs. Martineau whispered, still slumped in her chair. “But she’s done you great harm, so great that I should take her to the police this instant. Don’t you mean to prosecute?” “You are kind to take an interest, but I fear such action would only draw more dark spirits our way.” Mrs. Martineau glanced briefly at Kate before closing her eyes again. “I will recover in time. When she leaves this house tonight, she will take the darkness with her, and eventually it will consume her.” Eliot nodded. “Wise words.” He turned back to Kate, nostrils flaring. “If I see you again, girl, I will take you to the police.” He moved a step closer. “Either that, or I’ll deal with you myself.” Kate lifted her chin and stared back. With his clenched mouth and high color, he looked like an angry brat about to bellow. She longed to tell him so, but the insult stuck in her throat. She directed her gaze to the floor instead. As soon as Eliot was gone, the medium’s eyes snapped open. Her trembling and heavy breathing ceased, and she abruptly stood to close the door. Kate watched with numb detachment as the woman turned, the skirt of her delicate white dress flaring. In three steps Mrs. Martineau was upon her. “Fool!” A backhanded slap sent Kate reeling, and a moment later she was pinned against the wall. “How could you be so careless? Months of effort to lure Eliot into my scheme, and in one night you’ve ruined it all.” Kate knew better than to struggle--the woman liked a tussle far too well. “You didn’t wait long enough to call the spirit, ma’am. I wasn’t ready.” “You were clumsy, idiot girl.” Kate kept her head down. “Why did you say my father’s name?” Mrs. Martineau grunted. “Your father?” “The spirit you called. Frederic Stanton.” “I called on Stanton’s spirit because the little detectives gave his name as one associated with the sitters. I’m sure it’s no business of yours.” “Stanton is dead?” “Yes, you thick-skulled creature! Frederic Stanton has been dead for years.” She paused, and Kate glanced up to find the woman’s eyes narrowed. “And I happen to know he had no living children.” “Not with his wife.” Kate looked at the floor again. “Have you lost your wits?” Mrs. Martineau shoved Kate’s head against the wall. “Clearly you have. And now you’ve lost your situation as well. Your clumsiness has compromised my reputation, and the damage will be impossible to repair if you remain here. Pack your things and leave this house immediately. Take only the items you brought with you.” Kate blinked. “But where am I to go? You can’t just kick me to the streets.” “I can and will. If you don’t go, I’ll get the police after you. See if they don’t lock you up as a fraud.” She paused, her face turning sly. “Or perhaps I will allow Mr. Eliot to discipline you. You’re a frightful little criminal, after all. Shall I call for help?” The glint in the woman’s eyes forestalled further argument. “No, ma’am, I will go.” Mrs. Martineau released her and stepped away, a satisfied smirk on her face. Kate kept her back against the wall as the woman swept out of the parlor. Kate dropped the wig to the floor. The shroud soon followed, and it took a powerful exertion of will not to trample them both. Rubbing her damp and throbbing head, she slipped out to the hall and dragged herself up two flights of stairs. As she reached the attic floor, a shadow shifted near her door. “Who’s there?” she gasped. “It’s just me,” the shadow replied, sounding more like a boy than a ghost. “Christ, Billy! You shouldn’t scare me like that.” She opened the door to the attic room and made her way to the washstand. Billy lit the lamp and sat on the small bed, watching in silence as she poured tepid water into the basin and scrubbed the white paste from her face, neck, and arms. “You must have heard all that,” Kate muttered as she dried herself. “You’ve been sacked,” said Billy sadly. “Yeah.” She sank onto the bed next to him. “What am I to do, Billy?” He shrugged. “You hated working for Missus. Weren’t you sick of parading about in your petticoat? And never able to come out in the daylight? Don’t cry, Katie.”
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