An Exclusive Preview of The Crimson Inkwell: A Gaslamp Trinkets Novel
Chapter 1: Et Tu, Brutus
Critics are evil monsters. On a closer read of Dante, it isn’t difficult to find a remote, special place for their breed among the lower levels of hell. They’re somewhere right between fraudsters and heretics. It’s worth noting that Eve, when taking a bite of that forbidden fruit, did so only at the annoying, incessant insistence of a critic.
Thus, I feel my disappointment justified when, on reaching the bright red door of Langley’s Miscellany for my morning debrief with Byron Livingston, I happened across one of these vile creatures. On the outside steps, he tipped his hat to me as if to say “good-day.” But if he considered the day good, he must have already, at nine in the morning, gutted at least one poor journalist. And, seeing as Langley’s was the publication for which I wrote, I was nearly certain that journalist was me.
I shuffled through the door and shivered. Inside, I could feel the autumn chill that possesses those buildings too frugal to burn coal in September. Sure enough, Byron, my betrothed and editor, had not yet taken off his coat. He stood near his office, staring pensively at his prized skylark, which rested quietly on a wooden perch in its wire cage. I could tell he was troubled. The wrinkles in his eyebrows, already deep set for a man in his forties, still held their crease from the morning’s vexations. No doubt, he had been stewing over whatever Brutus, the loving name I’d lent to our most regular critic, had to say.
Byron rarely showed me his troubles. In fact, I treasured the moments when I happened upon him like this. It reminded me that he, like me, might not always be the picture of polite happiness. The moment vanished as he noticed me enter, and he gave me a broad smile under his large mustache.
“Luella, good morning,” he said, standing to grasp my hands. The coat fell to the floor, revealing a herringbone waistcoat. “You look radiant. I love the way you’ve done your hair.”
That had to be a lie. I looked perturbed, and my hair, somewhere between dark brown and red, had hardly seen a brush that morning.
“What did Brutus want?” I asked.
“Brutus? I haven’t the foggiest—oh right! I forgot your pet name for our friend—”
“He’s not our friend,” I cut in. “Is he?”
“Why not sit down for some tea? Mrs. Barker just brought over some biscuits from down the street,” he said, motioning to the cramped editing table. The two same tired teacups sat there waiting to go through their same old routine. In fact, everything about the office looked about the same as it always did. The small, spent fireplace sat in a corner across from Byron’s small office, which was nearly tucked out of sight. Old, weathered, wood wainscoting came waist-high on the walls. The windows, though dirty, let in an abundant portion of the morning light. Pages were strewn on chairs, tables, windowsills and the floor, which didn’t enjoy nearly enough rug.
“Why must you always draw out bad news?” I asked.
“I don’t intend to. I just believe the world is far more pleasant when viewed over the rim of a teacup,” he replied, pulling out a chair with an encouraging grin. The scraping of the chair woke up the bird, which eased into a few attempts of its practiced song.
I took off my gloves and sat down, pursing my lips as he slowly poured the tea. Byron Livingston. The man who took a chance on me, a twenty-five-year-old woman. When I met him, he was full of life and energy, even for a man past forty. He had a passion for journalism and economy and, by the way he had talked, would soon become the very wealthy owner of a popular weekly magazine. However, the intricacies of the publishing business weren’t as favorable as he anticipated, and now he seemed to grow older every day as he toiled to publish his weekly. Langley’s Miscellany. He made out alright, but I wasn’t expecting an estate of our own after the wedding. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if we moved into the rundown flat above the publishing house where he lived now. “Until business improves, as it surely will!” he always tittered on whenever I expressed concern about his finances and their future.
Until business improved, indeed. Brutus had our jugular in a vice grip.
“Well?” I spat out, breaking the tea-time tranquility.
“Well, how is your sister?” he asked, taking a sip.
“She has a bit of a cough. Who doesn’t? It’s midway through autumn.”
“The poor dear. What a lovely blouse you’re wearing. Is that the one I bought for you?”
It wasn’t, and I hardly looked any different than I did any other day. I wasn’t big on fashion. I liked my clothes to be attractive but practical. My sister, on the other hand, made herself presentable even when on her sickbed.
“Of course. It goes so well with my grey waistcoat and skirt. Now will you tell me what Brutus said or not?”
He stiffly replaced his teacup. “Well, if it’s all business then. Mr. Blakely,” I winced as he used my pseudonym, “you’re right. It wasn’t a friendly call.”
“How bad?”
“It wasn’t all bad. In fact, he didn’t hate it. What was the word he used? He said he was… indifferent.”
The word knocked the wind right out of me. “Indifferent?”
“Neither here nor there,” Byron said. “Not good and not bad.”
“You said it wasn’t bad,” I stammered. “Indifferent is the worst type of bad. All our hard work might as well just be letters and words printed on a paper napkin. Neither here nor there? That someone might pass it in the street and walk on, or worse! That someone might actually take the time to read my piece but then go on and never think of it again?”
“You’re getting yourself riled up, my dear,” he said. “Have a biscuit.”
I did not want a biscuit, but I took one.
“Byron, do you agree with him?”
He set down the biscuits and stood up. He leaned against the window and lit his pipe, taking a deep drag on it. The smell of the tobacco reminded me of my father. My father had sacrificed much so that I might be educated. The first time I published an article, I took the printed edition to Papa’s sickbed. I helped him read it, and when we finished, tears streamed on his cheeks into his whiskers. I’d only seen my father cry once. He died a week later.
“I’m so very fond of you,” Byron started. “I continually try to check this sentiment so that it doesn’t seep into our relationship as author and editor.”
“And you know I appreciate that,” I said.
“Sometimes I fear that my, well, my feelings for you sway my objectivity. But, I’ll be damned if the man that came in here this morning was right. You are a fantastic writer. If there is fault, it must be found elsewhere. I am to blame.”
Inside of me, I felt Byron was speaking absolute nonsense, but I’m not one to stop a man from spouting out his own crude type of love poem. Even if it is ill-timed.
“You report on the stories I suggest,” he continued. “And, since Langley’s Miscellany is a smaller publication, we don’t get the same tips and leads as the bigger papers. I’m ashamed to say it. I’m failing you, my darling.”
Personally, I find this type of humility not a little grating and disingenuous. Perhaps Byron spoke the words honestly, but I suspected their sincerity sprung, not from their veracity, but his desire to spare me pain. I thought this in spite of his brazen disclaimer to the contrary. Seized by this conclusion, I found myself at an emotional crossroads, unsure of whether to take strength from his devotion or languish in his confirmation of Brutus’ critique.
Men are never so unmanly as when swept up by an insecure infatuation.
All the same, I know not to bite an outstretched hand. Langley’s had given me a rare opportunity to test my mettle. He was not the first editor to whom I had submitted my work. I had applied at a dozen other publications before, and they, pen name or no, were convinced that, as a woman from a station like mine, I didn’t have the snuff to compete in the pressing world of journalism and authorship. Byron saved me.
We met at a dinner party arranged by my sister. I forget the precise occasion, but Byron could tell you all the details. To this day, I’m thankful we did not start our relationship on business footing.
In fact, it wasn’t until many meetings and a proposal later that I learned he managed Langley’s, and he only told me after learning that I was an aspiring writer. Before that, our relationship had been all about “Do you know so and so?” and “Have you ever read such and such?” But, after revealing his true identity as editor and publisher, he said he was always looking for good stories and would be happy to give me an audition. After all, sooner or later, our finances would conjoin, and what would be better than to have a dual threat from the hearth? Naturally, he had reminded me, this wouldn’t relieve me of my wifely chores and duties, especially once children came about, but I still counted it a measure ahead of any other. Not just to be led by a husband but yoked to his enterprise, it felt modern, progressive, and exciting.
But as time went on, the illustrious nature of our arrangement had faded. When I first began writing for him, I naively eyed our city’s top literary prize, The Golden Inkwell, reserved each year for Dawnhurst-on-Severn’s most esteemed columnist. With a backer like Byron Livingston, I would at least qualify for consideration of the award. I had a platform. I just had to write more prolific stories than any of my colleagues or competitors. There could be no sweeter realization of my father’s hopes for my future than having the Golden Inkwell on my mantle.
Once, I thought I had come close. Soon after I started writing for Langley’s, one of my stories titled “At Home with a Woman” caused quite the stir in our little city. The story detailed the benefits of aspiring to the type of gentlemanly conduct, be it in business, social or domestic responsibilities, that inspires women to affection. The story was widely read, and since I published it under the pen name Travis Blakely, even men even took it seriously.
A reporter who chronicled literary achievement in Dawnhurst came to our door one workday and asked to speak with Mr. Blakely. I was tempted to give away my identity in exchange for the interview, but Byron scooped up the reporter and claimed no small amount of credit for my work. As he had explained where the idea came from and its lasting importance for our society, I felt the bitter dredges of resentment in my throat.
Afterward, he had explained it was important for my career that I retain my pen name for now, and I couldn’t argue with his reasoning, but I couldn’t help but notice the arrogant gleam in his eye, the residual high of being interviewed by a reporter and anticipation of public praise.
Much to our mutual disappointment, I had never been able to replicate that initial success, and Travis Blakely lost whatever momentum he had toward the Golden Inkwell.
Now, with my professional prestige neatly departmentalized in Byron’s mind, when my stories performed poorly, I failed doubly, once as a writer and again as a wife-to-be. I recognized in Byron’s management style no progressive, pro-feminist temperament but a fear that I might decide to break our engagement should he now choose to cut me off.
Did he fear for nothing? The question scared me. Perhaps because it held a mirror up to my criticism of him. I was afraid to think about what I might do if he decided to let me go. I wanted to believe that I could happily live out my life as Mrs. Livingston, giving my opinion here or there on the publication when asked. Another part of me whispered that my gift of literacy was too dear to me, too central to my identity, just to spectate the print business as an onlooker. So, we had melted into a cocktail of love and business, unable to distinguish one relationship from another, ambition from security, or my love of writing from my love for the man who so clearly would give the world for me.
“What do you think about that?” Byron asked, puffing thoughtfully on his pipe. I snapped to attention.
“I’m sorry. I’m afraid I must have missed your last point.”
“Are you well, my dear?” he asked, the skylark singing merrily and energetically by now.
“Fine, just lost in my head for a moment.”
“I was asking whether or not you think we could afford to bring on a lad to dig up leads for us. Harold’s Weekly has at least three or four on staff for that. It’s no wonder we’re behind on the big stories when the editor and publisher are also trying to sniff out where the action is. You know me. I’m independent to a fault, but I think I’m beginning to understand that I have only so many hands.”
“Nonsense,” I responded. “You’re stretched thin as it is. How could we afford to hire on a lad if you won’t even put the fire on?”
“I’m terribly sorry! Look at me forgetting!” he said through a large puff of smoke and starting toward the fireplace.
“I don’t bring it up for my sake. I can’t imagine our competitors sit there editing stories without taking their coats off. If there is more work to be done, allow me to do it.”
“Oh, no! Luella, please. I can manage to hire a lad. It’s no trouble.”
“Neither for me,” I quipped, but I could tell by the way he left his mouth slightly agape that there was something about my proposal that made him feel a little uneasy. “Don’t you think I can do the job?”
“It’s just—well, I’m not sure if it’s a woman’s place. To find these stories, you might find yourself in some rough areas of town.”
“Excellent. Then they will never see me coming,” I said, rising before he could protest again. I gathered my gloves and thanked him for the tea and biscuits, but he crossed from the hearth and barred my way.
“Luella, I won’t allow it. You’re not to go sniffing out any leads. Do you understand? I forbid it. What if something happened to you?”
I chewed on my lip. What did he expect me to do? If I needed leads and he couldn’t spare the time or money to get them, then I could only see one way forward.
“Promise me,” he insisted.
I fingered the wire cage and listened to the bird sing sweetly inside of it.
“Are you asking me as my editor or my fiancé?” I asked.
“Both,” he replied without a moment’s hesitation.
I sighed but nodded dutifully.
“Please don’t worry too much about the critics,” he said, taking my hand firmly in his. “I’m certain we will still sell plenty of copies. Our savings will be on schedule for our pending marriage, my dear. This I promise. I think that most people will truly be interested in your piece on proper street etiquette for rainy days.”
His summary of my most recent article made me blush a deep fuchsia. I was grateful he had already bent to kiss my hand. I walked away from the shop bitterly aware that Brutus was doing us a favor by even reading me at all.
Chapter 2: The Dawnhurst Police
When I got home, I found my sister lying on her bed, feigning illness. We had a humble flat that felt warm and spacious when she was in a good mood and like a miserable dump when she was in a humor such as this. She was prostrated across the old mattress, a hand to her head, but fully dressed as though to go out walking. I suspected her illness had more to do with a certain Jacob Rigby than with the fever, but to suggest such was blasphemy.
She was six years my younger, and I adored her. The tendrils that threatened old maidenhood were just starting to tighten their grip on her. She had just passed through the uncomfortable stages of teenage vanity and human mortality. One moment, she believed herself to be the catch of all London, let alone Dawnhurst. The next, she was convinced no one would ever marry her.
I feared the latter, though I wasn’t without hope. After all, she was blessed with the family beauty. Where I struggled to tame my hair into a messy bun or remember whether a crinoline was on its way in or out of fashion, she could have lectured at length on the subject. She didn’t profess vain knowledge either. One of my father’s parting gifts to her was a dress he spent way too much money on that she didn’t yet fit into. It hung in her bedroom. I believed myself capable of saying, objectively, Anna was beautiful.
I had heard rumors, though, that some men found her boisterous and unseemly. Though she was now twenty, one might be convinced she was still sixteen after talking with her at a party, and though many men might turn a blind eye in exchange for a pretty face, Anna sought out courtiers less shallow than that.
She had settled on Jacob Rigby, a gentleman of eighteen years, apprenticed to his father as a barrister. He was a respectable man, though a less respectable match. The difference in their ages might not matter in twenty years, but now it hinted at scandal. Fortunately, her social immaturity saved her from disclosing that she was his senior to all but those who asked directly. It hardly seemed fair for her. After all, Byron was much older than I was, but society didn’t seem to care if it went the other way.
Still, things were promising between the two of them. But whether it was the disparity in their ages or her rumored immaturity, something about the way Jacob treated my sister gave off a fickle impression.
Perhaps this explained her unapologetic flop on our bed. I gave her some water and helped her change into a nightgown, while biting back comments about it not being called a mid-morning gown. I loved her dearly, my sister, but could not fathom why she bothered getting dressed to go out if she was just going to lament in bed.
“You don’t understand fashion and beauty like I do,” she said to me, her voice heavy with drama. “Feeling beauty on the outside is enough to change how you feel on the inside.”
“I see it’s worked marvelously in your case,” I replied.
“Oh, you’re right! I’ve wasted the entire morning!”
She was pretending to be asleep by the time I left.
As engrossing as it was, I couldn’t spare much more time fretting over my sister. We had agreed that her interests were best served trying to find a husband, and the burden of the daily bills would be left to me. I couldn’t imagine Anna lasting long working in a factory or hawking wares on the street. She was no good at cooking or mending, and she often lost her train of thought in daydreaming. One day long ago, as I tried to share my passion for the classics with her, she threw up her hands and exclaimed she had no interest in writing or reading. She was literate—I made sure of that— but she could not stand reading as a pastime or even to improve her education.
You might say she was born to be a wife. If I were my sister, I don’t know how I’d survive. Some children were a solid mix of their two parents. The rest of us take after one or the other. She was my mother. I was my father.
We had a paltry inheritance left to us by our hard-working father. We tried to stretch it out as thin as cheesecloth, but in the end, without getting married myself, I knew I’d be responsible for Anna. I worked odd jobs where I could, once as a delivery girl, once as a factory girl, once in a kitchen. I even had a stroke of luck working as a governess for a wealthier family that lived near the river. It was a wonderful job, except that the child was a spoiled demon. I was let go promptly when the mistress of the house discovered I was the daughter of a factory worker. Something about impropriety and her child learning improper morals.
Then I met Byron, and he actually gave my writing a shot. My first wage at Langley’s felt like fresh water. We weren’t starving by any stretch, but it was a signal of different times. Ironic. When I finally found a job writing, I also finally found a man.
I left our humble home and stewed over possible solutions to speed along Anna’s not-so-scandalous affair with Jacob until I was well on my way to the old precinct, located on the very edge of my promise to my editor.
If Byron wanted better leads and better stories, why not start where the trouble ends? The Dawnhurst Police Force.
I had strong memories of the station. My father had occasionally run with a troublesome lot. Before he turned ill, he would often come down to talk friends out of arrests for public drunkenness and other such unforgivable crimes. There was one stodgy police lieutenant, by now made sergeant, who might remember me as a girl. That became less likely each passing year.
I had promised Byron I wouldn’t go in search of leads. He was worried about me heading into seedy areas of Dawnhurst. But, what harm was there in a woman going to visit an old family friend at the local police station in the mid-morning? And if a story came out of it, so be it.
I walked through the town. We were undeniably into autumn now. The cobblestone streets were littered with dead or dying leaves from the trees that lined the walks. The station was just on the west side of the river, not a far walk from Langley’s, actually. The city likely could have used its presence more in the east, but the wealthy wanted to feel secure, and after all, they paid the greater part of the taxes. So they said.
I knew the city well, now having lived on both sides of the river. In fact, the boundaries of the city were the boundaries of my life. I had never traveled beyond them. My everyday life was wrapped up inside of it, and I liked it that way. Familiar monuments called to me from all corners. A large clock tower stood tall to the north—it hadn’t rung in many years, but it still felt like a herald. On the southeast strip, close to the river was the church in which my parents married. I hadn’t been there in years. In fact, my last time there had been around when the tower stopped chiming. My parents were buried in the attached graveyard.
But, what made Dawnhurst exciting to me was that, everywhere you went, there were peddlers or newsstands hawking the city’s most recent publications in a great contest over pocket change and the Golden Inkwell. You could often find stray papers, discarded a day or week before, lining the gutters. The city hadn’t always been like this. When I was a girl, I don’t remember so many people reading, but something in the last twenty years had set the city on fire with journalism and literature.
I walked into the police station, past its blue, brightly painted, and sturdy front door. Inside, the hard-working daylight coming through the barred front and back windows of the building mingled with illumination from the occasional gas lamp on the wall or desks in the darker areas of the station. A stringy looking fellow with bright red hair sat at the front counter. Behind him, I could see the commotion of a city police station. If I closed my eyes, it sounded almost like a buzzing beehive. Rows of desks sat in haphazard lines toward the back of the large room. Officers bustled in and out, brandishing batons and donning their hats while roughly barking familiar jabs at their compatriots on the way out the door. I received not a few sidelong glances. Some made me feel violated, others belittled, all of them out of place.
The red-haired fellow was hard at work on an impossibly large stack of papers and didn’t seem to notice any of the commotion around him.
“Excuse me,” I said, after clearing my throat.
“Who’s missing?” The clerk didn’t look up.
“I beg your pardon?”
“Missing persons will file with Miss Turner down the hall.”
“I’m not here to report a missing person,” I replied. This was enough to give the clerk at least a moment’s pause. He glanced his terrier of a face up at me and squinted one eye in the lamplight.
“Has your husband beat you?”
“I’m not married. I’m looking for Sergeant George Cooper.”
“Sarge, you’ve got a visitor!” he bellowed down the hallway behind him before turning back to me. “Right down the hallway, Miss. He’ll be happy to have a visitor that isn’t a felon. I suppose, assuming you’re not here to turn yourself in… You aren’t uh, you know, soliciting wares and suddenly discovered religion if you catch my meaning?”
This I did not grace with a verbal response. Instead, I leveled my eyes at him the way I used to as governess of an impish child, took off my gloves menacingly, and started down the hall.
“Please have a seat,” said whom I presumed to be the Miss Turner the clerk had mentioned. She wore a tweed skirt and waistcoat, and her hair was done up into what was once a bun. She too was busy in paperwork, pounding away furiously at a typewriter. I brushed off a filthy chair and waited. I watched Miss Turner for some time, wondering what pathway may have brought her to this desk. She appeared older than me. It’s difficult to guess the age of women around the middle of their lives, but the gentle lines around her eyes hinted to me that she was now closer to forty than thirty. I noticed no wedding ring.
I felt an almost immediate kinship to Miss Turner. It wasn’t a large stretch to imagine that I was looking at myself in ten years, pounding away at a typewriter, perhaps trying to publish works of my own in my spare time outside of my professional duties.
I have Byron now. I had to remind myself about my fiancé so often. How silly. Even when I was here on his bidding, for his publication no less.
“I wasn’t drinking on the job, sir!” I heard a man’s raised voice through the sergeant’s door.
Miss Turner slowly looked up at me. “They all say that.”
The door swung wide open, and I was struck by what I could only assume was the model for a police force figurine. The man had an acutely trim waistline that stretched up into a broad chest and shoulders. His hair was combed impeccably, as if each strand dared not stray from its assigned position. His eyes, alert and lively, were peculiarly warm for being steely grey. His brow furrowed, and his neatly trimmed policeman’s mustache curved downward into a disconcerting frown.
He swept through the office door and stood erect, as though he was at a self-called attention. Behind him, the large Sergeant George Cooper, a man whom I could only describe as a younger, meaner looking Father Christmas, filled the doorway.
“I don’t want outlandish stories, Lieutenant. I want arrests. I want brigands behind bars. I want young do-it-alls like you to stop trying to turn every little case into the next apocalypse,” Sergeant Cooper stammered. He was only mostly red in the face.
The young lieutenant stood and, though he looked thoroughly unamused, took the tongue lashing admirably.
“You’ve got a visitor,” butted in Miss Turner. Sergeant Cooper looked at me, and his expression instantly melted into a rehearsed sympathy.
“Ma’am, my deepest apologies,” he said, putting his hand on his heart. “Do you have a missing person to report?”
“No,” I stuttered. “I’m here… do you get a lot of missing persons?”
“Most of the women we see in here are reporting a missing husband or, regrettably, a missing child,” he replied.
“I’m sorry to hear that. But, and, well, I’m not sure how to put this exactly. I’m here from Langley’s Miscellany, and I—”
Before I could finish my sentence, the warm expression on Sergeant Cooper’s face melted away.
“You’re a reporter. Thank you, Miss, but the door’s over there.” He turned and retreated back into his office. I stuck my foot in the door, which was more painful than I thought it might be.
“I don’t want to be a bother. I’m just curious about the latest. I don’t mean to fabricate anything or inflate your efforts. I just—”
“You just want to be first to know about the dreadful muck the police force deals with each day.”
“Well, yes,” I replied.
“Like I said, Miss, the door is over there. I have a lot to do.” He put on a pair of spectacles and sat down at his desk. I felt a burn creep up my cheeks. It was one thing to be denied, another to be rejected right in front of a woman I had suddenly come to admire and a deeply handsome police lieutenant. The propriety!
“Please, you knew my father,” I said. He looked up at me over his spectacles. They were comically small for his large face. “Gerald Winthrop.”
“Jerry Winthrop?” the sergeant said with a laugh. “Devils blind me. You were the scrap of a thing always hiding in the corner, thinking we couldn’t see you.”
I nodded. He barked out a triumphant laugh.
“Your father was a hell of a man! Always sticking his nose in places it didn’t belong. Any mate of his in trouble, he’d be here before a spit trying to talk their way out it.” He stared into the air as if he could see my father in the office presently. “How is Jerry doing? I got into more arguments with him. He could take a yelling and deal it out in turn. If only my lieutenants had half the backbone. We exchanged words like lads in a fistfight.”
“Well, I hope you got the last word in then,” I said. His countenance dropped sharply.
“You don’t mean—how’d it happen?”
“Fever. Or something like that. I never did get a straight answer from the doctors.” I hated doctors. A fair majority of them might as well be bunkmates with critics.
“Doctors are thieves,” the sergeant said.
“I’m very sorry for your loss, Miss,” said a clear voice behind me. They were the first words the lieutenant said to me. The purity in his voice took me off guard. After losing my father, I’d heard “I’m sorry for your loss” time and time again. In nearly every case, it was mere etiquette, obligation, and passing fancy, as though someone might check a box of a tidy little list somewhere by saying the appropriate thing. This man, whom I barely knew, sounded arrestingly sincere.
I turned toward him, and he bowed slightly. Behind him, Miss Turner slid into focus with two very inquisitive eyebrows.
“Yes, well, this is Lieutenant Edward Thomas. He’s our resident… bleeding heart and imaginist,” Sergeant Cooper said. Edward extended a hand.
“It’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance,” I said. His eyes were smothering. I couldn’t seem to escape them. He had no shyness about looking a stranger squarely in the face, that’s for certain.
“The pleasure is mine,” I managed. “Imaginist?” I inquired of the sergeant.
“No doubt in it. In fact, Lieutenant Thomas may be exactly what you’re looking for,” he said with a coy smile.
“I’m engaged,” I spit out.
Sergeant Cooper erupted into an ungraciously loud belly laugh. I noticed Miss Turner turn her face down to suppress a giggle as well. Edward flushed.
“I’m sure you are. I meant for the stories you’ve been looking for,” Cooper said. I immediately felt feverish as itchy perspiration appeared on the small of my back. Luella Winthrop. Gift with words, I have.
“He has a story for me then?” I muttered, eager to move on.
“Aye. Lieutenant Thomas here claims to have seen a ghost!”