“Fliers!” cried Trelawny. “So close! And such as you are on the roofs! Down, now. If we’re not—”
“He called you?” interrupted McKee, though she was walking back toward the roof slope she had just descended, and the ladder on the far side. “How?”
“He can reach me in dreams,” said Johanna, swinging a boot over the roof peak and sliding down to the surface her parents stood on, “just like the other can.” She stepped across the icy tarred surface and stood worriedly beside her father. The bitter chill couldn’t be good for his lungs.
Trelawny had skated down from his perch to join them, and now he raised his gloved hands. “Reach her from the opposite spiritual direction,” he clarified. “These, you recall, are the hands that baptized her.” He turned to the mute Larks on the other side of the flat roof and said, “Good. Resume your patrol.”
“You called our daughter back to London?” said her father, who hadn’t moved.
Trelawny’s face was shadowed as he pulled his old hat back over his head. “I tried Chichuwee, day before yesterday,” he said gruffly, “but he could provide no help.”
“Help in what? Never mind, it doesn’t matter — our daughter is leaving with us on the next boat back to France.”
“You and Mother take it,” said Johanna. She squeezed his hand through two layers of glove leather. “This is for me to do. You two will just get killed if you stay — wait for me in”—belated caution kept her from again saying the name of the city—“in the place we’ve been living.”
“What’s for you to do?” burst out McKee.
“He,” said Johanna, not wanting to pronounce the name Polidori out here either, “has got himself another girl. She’s fourteen, just a year older than I was when that dead boy came after me, wanting to — to have a child, some sort of child, by me. She’s to be his bride, since I fled.”
“My granddaughter, that is,” said Trelawny. “Rose, Rose Olguin. I will—not have her digging her way up out of a grave and”—he added with a shudder—“and having congress with that dead thing.”
“You said your children were in America,” protested Johanna’s mother.
“Argentina,” said Trelawny impatiently, “one of them. Others stayed here and died. Of course. But the daughter in Argentina moved back to London two years ago, in spite of my warnings, and now her fourteen-year-old daughter—”
Johanna noticed that the Larks had disappeared over a low wall to the left; and a moment later the roof moved sideways under her boots. She hopped to keep her balance, but her father sat down and her mother crouched and braced one hand against the roof surface. Patches of snow slid down all the roof slopes, and she heard a low rumble roll across the City.
And then something buzzed past her ear, and when she jerked back, she saw a wasp swinging away through the moving veils of snow.
A wasp, she thought, in the middle of a snowstorm? Only after that did she think: An earthquake? In London?
“Follow me!” yelled Trelawny, moving now away from the way McKee and Crawford had come, toward the roof-edge wall beyond which the Larks had disappeared.
The roof was still swaying, and Johanna helped her father to his feet, waving away another wasp, and before hurrying after Trelawny she glanced back the other way.
A figure stood now beside the chimney where her mother and father had first appeared; its face under a tall silk hat was shiny black, and at the end of each of its long arms it waved a thin bamboo stick as if conducting an enormous orchestra.
“Where where where?” it called, in such a melodious voice that Johanna thought it had begun to sing.
A loud, hard pop shook the air, and the figure bowed and thrashed its sticks wildly but didn’t lose its balance; looking the other way, Johanna saw Trelawny lowering a smoking pistol.
“Mere de Dieu!” she exclaimed, halting. “What are you doing?”
“Get over here!” yelled Trelawny, tucking the pistol away.
Johanna hustled her father to the far edge of the roof where Trelawny was waiting impatiently, and then the four of them climbed over the low wall and dropped six feet into a narrow snow-filled gully between two projecting gables.
The footprints and handprints of the Larks were visible in the snow to the left, and had presumably extended up the shingle slope on that side before the shaking of the earthquake, but Trelawny led them through the knee-deep snow the other way, up and between a pair of cupolas and down into another snow-choked trough, this one thickly hazed with black smoke from a rank of chimneys at the downhill end.
Crawford was coughing before they had moved three paces, and when Trelawny stopped, Johanna yelled, “Get us out of this smoke!”
“In a minute,” the old man called back hoarsely. “The smoke will repel the wasps, and they’re how he sees.”
From somewhere behind among the slopes and peaks and chimneys, Johanna heard again the nearly musical Where where where? Had Trelawny’s pistol ball missed the man with the sticks?
“Christina Rossetti—” began Trelawny, then paused to cough himself before going on, “blinded him seven years ago.”
Crawford managed to choke out, “Can we — get down this way?”
Johanna could hardly see her companions through the stinging billows of smoke.
“We can get farther away,” said Trelawny. “I don’t know about down. Follow me.”
Beyond the next gable ridge, blessedly out of the worst of the smoke now, they found a row of windows overlooking Whitefriars Street extending away to their right, and the sills were a foot-wide stone ledge over the sheer drop. Trelawny began shuffling along it, facing the building and edging to his left, gripping the eaves that projected at shoulder height above the windows. Over the sighing of the wind, Johanna could faintly hear the rattle of wagons and carriages eight floors below.
Johanna quickly unstrapped the wobbly pattens from her boots and saw her mother doing the same. They wouldn’t fit in the pocket of her coat, so she dropped them on the roof.
Then, her ears ringing with fright, she shuffled out onto the ledge after the old man, her gloved hands holding tightly to the eaves and her boots scuffing in the tracks Trelawny’s had cleared in the snow. Her father was right behind her.
“Hang on,” she said to him over her right shoulder, earnestly and unnecessarily. “Walk carefully.”
“You too.”
The wind was from the north, sweeping straight down Whitefriars Street, and it kept funneling between her torso and the window lintels and trying to push her outward. Every new grip on the eaves shingles was tight enough for her fingers to feel the grain of the wooden ridge through the leather of her gloves, and she scraped her boots slowly along the ledge, very aware of the glaze of ice.
“Who,” she panted through clenched teeth, speaking mainly to distract herself from the abyss an inch behind her heels, “is he? The blind wasp man?”
Trelawny’s snow-dusted hat twisted around, and for a moment she caught the gleam of one eye above the scar-twisted lips.
“You should know him,” he said, looking forward again. “He’s the dead boy who hoped to have his way with you.”
“But — he’s a blackamoor now!”
“It’s paint.”
Johanna looked back to her right and was relieved to see the silhouettes of her father and mother slowly shuffling single file along the ledge behind her.