Back at my uncle’s house the three of us informed Frederick and Henry of the latest events that had transpired.
Frederick of course, was most concerned.
“Good Grief. So now there’s a creature running around that can be either male or female…with the ability to be impregnated by a human man, in it’s female form…and then give birth to some awful monstrosity in a matter of weeks? With the intention of breeding enough of the things to conquer the city of London and feed off the inhabitants?”
“That’s it in a nutshell,” I agreed.
“Have another brandy, Frederick,” suggested Susan.
“A double thank you, Henry,” the inspector pleaded.
Clutching his glass between his hands Frederick spoke again. “So is there any good news?”
“Well,” I replied cheekily. “We got to see Susan naked.”
This earned me a dark look from the lady in question. “You must like being knocked on your backside, you must. Done it once, I can do it again you know.”
Bull Sackett chuckled. “Highlight of the evening Susan.”
“I can knock Yank’s on their arse ‘an all Mr. Ranger.”
“I lost my Express rifle in the fire,” I mentioned sadly.
“But saved my compass,” said Bull. “That was a great risk you took Allan. I’m guessing you only got out by the skin of your teeth?”
“It was a close run thing,” I admitted.
“Yes, the compass,” said my uncle. “Is it too badly damaged to work again do you think Bull?”
The American sighed. “I don’t know Henry. Hoping I can get a watchmaker to take a look at it. See if’n he can maybe straighten it out a bit.”
“I know one of London’s finest chronometeer’s,” Frederick informed us. “Clockmaker if you will. We shall take your compass over to him this afternoon Bull. If anyone can repair it he can.”
“Excellent,” I applauded. “It’s been an awfully long night. I’m off to get some sleep for a few hours. I’m sure you’re all welcome to take advantage of uncle’s offer to make up a bed here. Pointless returning to your own dwellings, if we’re all to be up and about again shortly. Regardless, I shall bid you all good night, or good morning as the case may be.”
With their wishes for a sound sleep ringing in my ears, I made my way wearily upstairs to the room that my uncle kept aside for me.
I didn’t even bother to remove my outer clothing. I simply fell down onto my bed and sleep overtook me within moments.
* * *
It seemed as though I had closed my eyes mere seconds ago.
Someone was shaking me. “Come on lazybones. Up and at ‘em.”
Susan’s voice, I registered dimly. I mumbled something.
More shaking, irritating to be sure. “Kiss me or kill me, but let me sleep,” I muttered.
Suddenly I felt a not insignificant weight land atop me. I grunted in shock. A pair of small, soft hands took hold of each side of my head and the next thing I knew, a pair of equally soft lips pressed themselves to my own.
It was an extremely pleasant sensation. Keeping my eyes closed I returned the kiss. It went on for some time. Eventually I opened one eye. Both of Susan’s were open. They positively sparkled. I went to wrap my arms around her, when she broke free and pushed herself off me. She smoothed down her dress and fussed with her hair.
“That’s for saving me life,” she announced.
I had both eyes open now. “Did Bull get the same treatment?”
She stuck her tongue out at me. “Nah, he’s married remember. I gave him a hug and a peck on the cheek.”
“Highly commendable,” I observed. “Will I be getting anymore kisses? Perhaps a few in advance, for the saving of your life I’ll undoubtably be doing in the future?”
She gave me a smouldering look. “You’re not a bad kisser. I’ll have to think about it.”
“Oh please do.”
I heard Bull’s voice from down the hallway. “How long does it take to wake up a great white hunter?”
“He’s awake,” Susan yelled back. “Looks like death warmed over ‘an all, he does.”
“Do I really?” I asked.
“Wait till you get a good look at yourself in the mirror cully. You’re covered in soot, your face is scorched and you stink of ash and smoke. It’s into the bath for you, young man.”
“Any chance of a back-rub?”
Another look. “If I come in to rub your back darlin', I’ll make sure I’ve got a copper bristled brush in me ‘ands.”
“I’ll manage alright by myself,” I hastily assured her. I was beginning to realise that with Susan, anything might be possible. Including the brush.
She smiled. “I’ve run a tub for you already Allan. You toddle off and have a good scrub and I’ll make you a nice brekkie afterwards.”
“Breakfast sounds wonderful.”
“More like bleeding lunch. You’ve almost slept the whole morning away.”
* * *
Scrubbed clean, I went down to a full English breakfast of bacon and eggs, toast, marmalade and a big pot of tea.
Bull and I chatted briefly before he went off for an appointment with Frederick and his clockmaker.
This left Susan, my uncle and I alone in the house. The housekeeper was out doing some grocery shopping.
We discussed the events of the night past and what our plans to catch up with the Baylok in the near future might be.
We only had a short amount of time to catch the inhuman thing I guessed. Before he/she/it put its diabolical plan into action.
The daily paper contained details of the fire last night in Whitechapel, adding that the police suspected an armed gang had been responsible for starting it. Witnesses claimed to have heard gunfire from within the building before the fire broke out. Who were we to disagree with them? I felt that for once the journalists had actually managed to at least get some of their facts straight.
It was decided we would relax until Bull returned. My uncle suggested a walk in the nearby park, to which Susan readily agreed. For myself I still felt a little tender in places from my encounter with the flames last night. I was content to merely sit in comfort on the well padded lounge and read a novel.
“’An you being a young man ‘an all Allan,” said Susan.
“The events of last night, coupled with this mornings excitement, has left me drained I fear,” I told her.
My uncle gave me an odd look. “Excitement? This morning?”
“He’s being funny Henry. Take no notice of him.”
I waved a languid hand. “Be off with you. Leave me to my book.”
So off they went. And as soon as I heard the front door close I promptly stretched myself out on the lounge and went back to sleep.
* * *
Bull Sackett returned before Susan and my uncle.
“Clockmaker couldn’t fix the compass,” he told me straight away. “Reckons it’s made in a way he doesn’t understand. Reckons he doesn’t even know what kind of metal the internal mechanism’s made of. He wanted to keep it for a thorough examination, but I wouldn’t let him. Best he was able to do is straighten the needle and replace the broken glass cover.”
“That’s not good,” I admitted. “Does it work still, do you think?”
“No way to know I guess. Not until we go looking for the Baylok again.”
“Then we shall go forth again tonight,” I told him. “And every night until we catch the monster.”
My friend grinned. “I admire your persistence Allan.”
“How much of that red powder do you have left?” I inquired.
“A tiny amount.”
“The creature boasted that it had transferred its energies to a fragment of life-stone. Mayhap the powder will be enough to destroy that fragment?”
A shrug. “Hope so amigo. Have to find the thing again first.”
“Indeed,” I sighed. “It’s almost like we’re right back at the beginning of our quest again.”
Bull nodded morosely. “Was thinking the same thing myself.”
Just then my uncle and Susan bustled through the front door. Carrying several packages and bags.
They saw our long faces.
“Cheer up boys,” cried Susan. “Me ‘an Henry been shopping. Bought some clobber to put a smile on your dials.”
I smiled at her. The more I heard her speak the more I enjoyed her accent. So much more alive did it sound than the boringly staid tones of the upper London classes.
* * *
With Frederick once more at our side, we went hunting again that very night. Again my uncle Henry drove us about in the seconded Hansen. Bull stood beside him while the rest of us sat inside. The cabs not being large enough to seat four comfortably. The hatch above our heads was open, to allow us to converse with the others.
We rode around Whitechapel several times between ten p.m. and midnight…and the compass in Bull Sackett’s hand registered not a tiny movement.
“I think it’s broke,” he said forlornly.
We visited the place where we had first met Susan. Then the alleyways and streets along which Bull and I had pursued the Baylok. Even did we return to the gutted building that had caught fire last night. And all to no avail. The compass did not flicker so much as an iota…and we likewise saw neither hide nor hair of any man, women or beast we suspected might be the Baylok.
Hour after hour we drove around. Sometimes Bull and I walking about by ourselves.
One of the packages my uncle and Susan had returned with contained a brand new Express rifle. This one specially cut down with shortened barrels. The better to conceal beneath my cape. I was touched. How many women go shopping for rifles for their male companions?
Henry had paid for it of course. The cost of a custom made Express rifle was beyond the means of many people. But engraved on a small steel plaque on the stock were the words:
For Allan, from Susan
With much affection
I was suitably impressed. Bull agreed that a woman who buys a man a good firearm was a ‘woman to ride the river with” whatever that meant? Some of the expressions that our American friend came out with baffled me.
I was also given a new great-coat to replace my charred cape. It was made of thick, dark blue wool and had shoulder drapes to let water drain off it. It came almost to my ankles and would be perfect to hide any weapons I might see fit to carry about my person.
“I bought it all, but Susan picked it,” my uncle confided in me when were alone together. “She’s a great girl you know?”
I had already deduced that and told him so. He mentioned something about ‘making someone a good wife’ and I asked if he’d been talking to Bull about Susan and myself. My only reply being a small chuckle.
I was leery about all this ‘wife’ stuff myself. I had seen first hand how white women, met and married in England or Europe and thence transported to the wilds of Africa, to live with their new husbands, had often not been wives for very long. Indeed I could count on the fingers of one hand exactly how many white women had lasted alongside their husbands in Africa. It is not a place for the fainthearted. The romantic visions that many European women have of the bushveldt is soon dispersed when the harsh reality of life in the bush is experienced. I’d had female friends stay with me in my home or come along on safari several times. In very short order they were only too glad to return to their country of origin. Since then I had not considered marriage to a woman raised within the gilded confines of the British Isles.
“Nothing,” Bull muttered beside me.
We were walking along one of the smaller backstreets. Already the fog was thick enough to cut with a knife. We had seen a few people strolling, (perhaps rolling might be a better term) about.
None had paid us much attention, save the inevitable offers of the prostitutes.
We returned to a main street and met up with our companions in the Hansen.
Bull expressed his dismay in his magical compass.
“But it might just be that the Baylok is lying low,” my uncle consoled him. “I mean you had no results the first few nights you were hunting the creature did you?”
“That’s true,” admitted the American. “Let’s give it another hour or so and we’ll call it quits for tonight.”
Another hour made no difference however. Either the Baylok was indeed keeping itself quite somewhere, or the compass was no longer functioning.
At length we returned to my uncle’s house.
It felt very unsatisfying that, having almost caught and destroyed the creature, that we must now find it all over again.
We were all somewhat muted and despondent.
Frederick offered to escort Susan home. Bull was headed back to his hotel, but accepted my uncle’s offer to relocate himself to our abode the next morning.
“No need to waste all your money staying at the Ritz, day after day Bull,” my uncle told him. “Plenty of room here.”
“It ain’t exactly my money I’m wasting at the Ritz Henry,” the other responded cryptically.
“Is the Governor of Texas paying for everything then?” I asked.
A chuckle. “No, he ain’t Allan. Poor feller probably couldn’t afford my gallivanting and upkeep.”
“Then how do you afford to live in that flashy hotel?” Susan asked.
“Well…I’m a gambler. A pretty good one if I do say so myself. I been financing this hunt with the money I make playing poker.”
We all looked at him in surprise.
He raised his hands. “Hey, it’s not a crime you know. Poker is all a mater of mathematics, hardly any luck involved at all. Just so happens I’ve got a good memory for the cards being dealt and the likelihood of the cards the other players are holding.”
“And you’ve been able to pay your way all across America and now here in England through your poker winnings?” I asked sceptically.
He nodded. “Yep. Reason I always try and stay at the posh hotels is that there’s always a few fellers looking to have a poker game. Lot of high rollers stay at those hotels. I don’t normally have no trouble getting myself into a game.”
“Do you lose much,” Susan asked with genuine curiosity.
“I let myself lose a few hands now and again. Kinds of gives the other players the idea that they might have the upper hand in the skill stakes.”
I shook my head and smiled. “That home town accent you affect must disarm a lot of people.”
“I thought the very same thing myself,” Frederick interjected. “I knew you were not just a common town sheriff when you used that Latin expression some days ago. Modus Operendi indeed. That’s more the kind of language I’d expect from some university educated chap.”
“I reckon I can speak English as good as y’all when I want to,” Bull confessed. “But where I come from, most everyone talks like this. Goes with the territory so to speak.”
After we’d all said our goodbyes, my uncle and I retired for a nightcap in the lounge.
“Remarkable fellow that Ranger Sackett,” he said to me.
I nodded. “It wouldn’t do to underestimate him. I’m sure plenty have.”
“Those ones are probably buried in…what do the Yanks call it?...Boot Hill?”
“You’ve been reading too many of those penny dreadful western tales,” I laughed.
* * *