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“If you’ll allow, sir, I’d prefer to limit the numbers to those I’ve named. I should like to catch the man, so we might hand him over to the authorities. If too many of us patrol the estate, we’re liable to scare him away, possibly to inflict his disease upon others.”

Henry Arundell considered for a moment then nodded. “Whatever you think best.”

Though they’d accepted Burton’s explanation for the face at the window and for Isabel’s condition, the Arundells were rather less approving of the crushed garlic bulbs Levi had liberally distributed around their daughter’s bedchamber.

“What a terrible reek!” her father objected. “What in the name of God are you trying to do? Suffocate her?”

“It sterilise the atmosphere,” Levi asserted. “The odour is unpleasant, but it help drive the parasite away.”

Arundell wrinkled his nose. “And the crucifixes?” he asked, gesturing at the many additional crosses Levi had added to the room.

The Frenchman quoted, “‘The Lord will keep you from all evil; He will keep your life.’”

Henry Arundell had blinked confusedly at this and departed, pulling his wife after him.

“Whenever Isabel open her eyes,” Levi said to Burton, “she must see the cross; must be reminded of what she most deeply believe in. She not let go of it, not allow Perdurabo to steal her will to live.”

Later, during a subdued dinner, Blanche asked, “Should we cancel the party, mother?”

“At such short notice?” Eliza Arundell exclaimed.

“To be frank with you, ma’am,” Doctor Bird interjected, “even if the crisis has passed, I cannot envision your daughter being strong enough by Saturday.”

“We’ll postpone for a fortnight, not cancel,” Henry Arundell said. “Which means we have nearly three hundred letters of apology to write.” He addressed the butler. “Nettles, have a couple of the footmen report to my study. I believe Clunk and Tick have the best calligraphy?”

“They do, sir.”

“Good. I’ll compose, they can copy.” Turning back to his guests, he said, “It’s the fastest way. They write so rapidly their hands become a blur. We’ll have the letters ready to post first thing in the morning.”

After dinner, the family took to the chapel to pray for Isabel’s recovery. Their guests socialised for a short time but a tense atmosphere hung over New Wardour Castle and a couple of hours after the sun had set, everyone retreated to their rooms.

Sadhvi Raghavendra joined Burton to stand watch over Isabel. They lit a wall lamp but adjusted the wick until the light was dim, so as not to disturb the patient, though she appeared to be in an extremely deep sleep.

“She is dreaming, Richard. You see how her eyes move beneath the lids? But they are not happy dreams. Her limbs are jumping, as if she is imagining herself fleeing from danger.”

“Dreamt dangers are ephemeral, Sadhvi. I’m more concerned about the real.”

Burton lowered himself into a chair, removed one of the pistols from his waistband, and held it resting on his thigh. Sadhvi also sat.

“I’ve hardly seen you today,” he said. “Are you all right?”

“We Sisters are very sensitive to . . . balance.”

“Balance? What do you mean by that?”

“Everything possesses a natural point of equanimity, and we have an affinity with that state, thus we sense when it is disturbed; when things become askew. What is happening to Isabel is an imbalance. Matters surrounding her are out of joint. I feel it and it distresses and tires me.”

“Why didn’t you say? Go to bed. I’ll recruit Blanche for sentry duty.”

“No. I prefer to stay.” She smiled. “It reminds me of when we sat up to guard the camp on the shores of the Nyanza Lake. Africa was difficult, but it was a happy time. Already, I miss it.”

Burton nodded. They gave themselves over to memories and silent companionship, breathed garlicky fumes, and the hours passed.

In a distant hallway, a grandfather clock chimed two.

Movement roused Burton and Raghavendra; they had both fallen into a light doze. It was Isabel. She was sitting up, her eyes glazed and her face slack. She pushed the bedsheets back, swung her bare feet to the floor, and stood.

“Isabel?” Burton asked.

She didn’t answer or even acknowledge him.

“Sleepwalking,” Sadhvi whispered.

Burton jumped up, crossed to the door, turned the key in the lock, then pulled it out and stepped back.

His fiancée swayed for a moment. She moaned softly, ran to the door, and pulled its handle. A whine of frustration escaped her. She tugged at it, twisted it, then fisted her hands and hammered them against the portal.

Burton moved behind her and took her by the wrists. “Come away from there, darling.”

She struggled and whimpered; clawed her fingers and tried to scratch at the door. He pulled her back from it. Sadhvi stepped in front, reached up, and entwined her fingers in Isabel’s.

“Sleep, Isabel,” she murmured. “Go back to sleep.”

Isabel slumped into Burton’s arms. He picked her up, carried her to the bed, and laid her down. She moved restlessly. He drew the sheets up to her neck and placed a hand on her forehead.

She quietened and became still.

Burton and Raghavendra returned to their chairs. The lamp flickered and dimmed slightly. Prickles ran up Burton’s spine. He checked his pistol, held it tightly, and whispered, “Do you feel it, Sadhvi?”

“Yes,” she responded huskily. “A sense of—of—”

“Dread.”

She nodded mutely.

Half an hour ticked by and, with every minute of it, the atmosphere in the bedchamber grew more strained, as if imbued with electricity, causing the hairs on Burton’s arms to stand upright.

The flame in the lamp guttered and died.

Burton got to his feet and put his gun on the chair. He took a box of lucifers from his pocket and struck one. It didn’t ignite. He tried another. Nothing.

“Stay where you are, Sadhvi,” he said, retrieving the pistol.

He walked to the window and pulled open the curtains. Moonlight streamed in. He slid up the sash, then frowned and ran his forefinger around the latch. It was broken. He hadn’t noticed that before.

Burton leaned out of the window to see whether Swinburne, Monckton Milnes, Levi, or Steinhaueser were in sight. He immediately saw the latter lying motionless on the lawn, but this hardly registered before movement below the window attracted his attention. He looked down and saw a big, shadowy shape clinging to the wall like a lizard. A thick, black-clad arm reached from it, the white muscular hand at its end stretching out, the splayed fingers appearing to dig into the brickwork. The figure heaved itself up.

As if from far away, Burton heard Sadhvi say, “Richard?”

He couldn’t reply, couldn’t tear his eyes from the uncanny form.

A face emerged from the dark hump, white in the moonlight, broad-featured, tousle-haired, with a flat nose and a wide, wickedly grinning mouth. The eyes were completely black.

John Judge.

Burton strained to move but it was like pushing through thick mud; his limbs were as heavy as lead.

Mesmerism. Break free of it. You know how.

He summoned a mantric formula and made a loop of it, mentally repeating it over and over, establishing a fast and complex rhythm. He visualised interlocking shapes, filling his mind with convoluted geometries; and while he was doing this, the awful figure on the wall climbed closer and closer, its eyes burrowing into him, transfixing him, pinning him like an insect to a board.

Burton made an association: the hypnotic influence and the mantric chant were one and the same; the emanation from the creature below him was embodied in the serpentine designs he had visualised.

He broke the rhythm, shattered the pattern, and threw off the influence.

Leaning down out of the window, Burton pushed the barrel of his pistol against Judge’s forehead and pulled the trigger. The weapon emitted a futile click.