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Chapter no 5: The First Alouette

Ruthless Vows (Letters of Enchantment, 2)

โ€œI donโ€™t think heโ€™sย turned,โ€ Iris said. โ€œRoman is trying to stay alive.โ€

Helena arched a brow. โ€œThat very well could be. But that also means heโ€™s unreliable and compromised. I canโ€™t trust him anymore, and now heโ€™s going to cause conflict for us by writing for our competitor.โ€

Iris returned her gaze to theย Oath Gazette,ย still in hand. Her mind was spinning, but she focused on Romanโ€™s article. She could almost hear him reading it to her, his cadence sharp, cold. Almost unfamiliar. Until her eyes caught on one word, easily overlooked in his sixth sentence:ย A story not just confined to aย museumย or a history tome that many of us will never touch, but a story that is in the process of being written.

โ€œMuseum,โ€ Iris whispered. โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ Helena asked.

Iris blinked. Her heart was suddenly racing. โ€œNothing. Just a thought.โ€

Helena sighed, hands on her hips. โ€œIs this going to interfere with your ability to report, kid?โ€

โ€œNo. On the contrary,โ€ Iris said, striding to the telephone. โ€œIโ€™m going to get to the bottom of this.โ€ She held up theย Oath Gazetteย and gave the newspaper a good shake, just to appease Helena and the editors who were still watching her. Then she picked up the earpiece and dialed for the operator.

A male voice crackled over the line. โ€œHow may I direct your call?โ€ โ€œTheย Oath Gazette,ย please,โ€ Iris said.

โ€œPlease hold.โ€

She waited, tapping her foot. She could hear the static on the line, the sound of switches being flipped, and then a steady ringing in her ear. She knew theย Oath Gazetteย had multiple telephones. There was no telling which one her call had been directed to, and she counted in her mind, waiting, hoping, praying โ€ฆ

โ€œHello, this is Prindle speaking for theย Oath Gazette.โ€

A smile broke across Irisโ€™s face. It was just as she had hoped, and it took her a breath to gather her words.

โ€œHello?โ€ Sarah Prindle said again, a touch impatient.

โ€œPrindle.โ€ Iris spoke in a low voice. โ€œI have some important news for you. It must be delivered in person. Meet me at Gouldโ€™s Cafรฉ in twenty.โ€

โ€œMeet atโ€”โ€ Sarah sounded indignant but cut herself off. Her voice softened with a small gasp. โ€œWait a minute โ€ฆ Winnow, is this you? I recognize your voice.โ€

โ€œYes, itโ€™s me.โ€

โ€œBut Autry โ€ฆ I donโ€™t have off until my lunch break.โ€

โ€œI know, but I need to see you as soon as possible. Can you slip away?โ€ It was quiet for a minute. Iris could nearly see Sarah in her mindโ€™s eye,

glancing furtively across the hustle of theย Oath Gazette.ย No doubt Zeb Autry was in his office, pouring whiskey over ice with a stack of papers on his desk.

โ€œYes, I think I can,โ€ she finally said, her voice tinged with excitement. โ€œTwenty minutes, you say? At Gouldโ€™s?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Iris replied. โ€œIโ€™ll be waiting for you.โ€ โ€œThen Iโ€™ll see you in a bit.โ€

Iris hung up the receiver and turned. Theย Tribuneย was still watching her, wide-eyed with interest.

She tucked theย Gazetteย under her trench coat, to protect the paper from the rain. With Romanโ€™s traitorous words pressed to her heart, Iris departed theย Tribune.ย She walked through the swirling gray mist to Gouldโ€™s Cafรฉ.

 

 

Sarah Prindle was a few minutes late, but Iris didnโ€™t mind. She had chosen a small round table in the corner of the cafรฉ, between a bookshelf and a potted lemon tree. A perfect place for a surreptitious conversation, and Iris had just hung up her trench coat and ordered a pot of tea when she heard the bell ring above the cafรฉ door.

Sarah looked just as Iris remembered. Although truth be told, it had only been a matter of months since they had worked together at theย Gazette. But since then, the weeks had been full of strange, darkened days, and Irisโ€™s breath snagged when she acknowledged that it truly felt like years had passed.

โ€œWinnow!โ€ Sarah whisper-cried in excitement, hurrying to the corner. Iris rose with a smile. โ€œItโ€™s good to see you, Prindle.โ€

They embraced so tightly that Iris felt her spine pop, and she got a good mouthful of Sarahโ€™s fine blond hair.

โ€œPlease, sit,โ€ Iris said, easing back into her chair. โ€œI just ordered us a pot of tea.โ€

โ€œWhich never gets cold. A nice perk of an enchanted building.โ€ Sarah leaned her umbrella against the wall before she sat.

A waiter delivered a steaming pot of teaโ€”it was true; it never got cold at Gouldโ€™sโ€”along with a pitcher of creamer and honey and a plate of butter-glazed scones. The girls were quiet as they prepared their cups. But then Sarah must have felt the worry that had followed Iris into the cafรฉ. She glanced up and said, โ€œI take it you saw Kittโ€™s article this morning.โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ Iris reached down to where she had the paper waiting on the floor, setting it on the tabletop. Romanโ€™s headline continued to draw her in, like an eddy in the ocean. โ€œAnd I have some questions.โ€

โ€œAs do I,โ€ Sarah said, removing her glasses to wipe the fog and speckled rain from them. โ€œIโ€™ve had questions ever since you left theย Gazette,ย such as why did Kitt resign only a few weeks after you left? It all seems serendipitous, until I look at it closer.โ€ She placed her glasses back on her nose, her eyes flaring wide. โ€œAnd oh my gods, I just noticed you have a ring on your hand! Is that โ€ฆ did the two of youโ€ฆ?โ€

โ€œShh,โ€ Iris said, noticing they had drawn a few glances. โ€œAnd yes. Kitt and I are married.โ€

โ€œWhenย did this happen?โ€ โ€œAt the front.โ€

โ€œOh, you haveย soย much explaining to do, Winnow. Or should I also call you Kitt now?โ€

โ€œWinnow is fine,โ€ Iris said, taking a sip of tea. โ€œBut itโ€™s a long story and itโ€™ll have to be shared later, Iโ€™m afraid. Right now, I need to know how Kittโ€™s words arrived at theย Gazette.ย Did they come by letter? Was it addressed to Autry? Was it handwritten or was his article already typed?โ€

Sarah frowned. โ€œYou know, itย wasย very odd. But two days ago, I was sitting in Autryโ€™s office, taking down his lunch order, when a man knocked on the door.โ€

โ€œWho was this man?โ€ Iris demanded. โ€œWhat did he look like? What was his name?โ€

โ€œI โ€ฆ I donโ€™t know who he was,โ€ Sarah replied. โ€œI honestly couldnโ€™t see his face. He was tall, I remember. He wore a cloak, and the hood was up. His voice was rough and had a strange, almost languid lilt. Not unpleasant, but it made me feel cold when I heard it.โ€

Iris sat back in her chair, cracking her knuckles. This man must have been one of Dacreโ€™s associates. One of Dacreโ€™s most trusted servants had beenย inย Oath, standing not far from where Iris and Sarah sat now, sharing tea in a cafรฉ. How had the man moved so seamlessly, without detection? Had he taken the train to Oath? Had he walked from the war front to the city? Ridden in a vehicle?

It made the hair rise on Irisโ€™s arms. The war was much closer to the city than she had once believed.

โ€œSo this manย handย delivered Kittโ€™s article to Autry,โ€ Iris surmised.

โ€œHe did. And he said it was something Autry would surely want for a price.โ€

โ€œAnd what was the price?โ€

Sarah fiddled with the dainty handle of her teacup. โ€œThat Autry could have it, but only if he agreed to continue publishingย allย the articles that were delivered to him. He couldnโ€™t pick and choose from that moment onward.โ€

โ€œSo more will be coming?โ€

Sarah nodded. โ€œAutry was very pleased with it all. He sent me away from his office so he could open the delivery in private. Not two minutes later, he called me back in, and told me to carry the article to Bentonโ€™s desk, for proofing. So I did, and I got a glance at it, shocked to see it was Kittโ€™s writing.โ€

โ€œHis handwriting?โ€ Iris asked.

โ€œNo. It was typed,โ€ Sarah answered. โ€œI only meant that I was taken aback to see hisย wordsย again, and that he was to publish with theย Gazetteย once more, especially after he quit and caused such a stir with Autry.โ€

Romanโ€™s article had been typed, which meant he had access to a typewriter.ย Hopefully one of the Alouettes,ย Iris thought.

โ€œIs Kitt โ€ฆ is he in trouble, Winnow?โ€ Sarah asked.

โ€œI believe he is,โ€ Iris said. โ€œAnd Iโ€™m about to ask you to do something very illegal and very dangerous.โ€

โ€œIllegal?โ€

โ€œYes. And I wouldnโ€™t put you in this position if I didnโ€™t desperately need you to pull it off.โ€

Sarahโ€™s mouth quirked to the side. She set down her teacup and laced her fingers together, leaning closer to Iris with a conspiratorial air. โ€œIโ€™m listening, then.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re still very familiar with the museum, arenโ€™t you?โ€ โ€œWell, yes. I go there every weekend with my dad.โ€

Iris chewed on her lip, knowing this was the moment of no return. And yet there was no other option. She was consumed by the thought of writing to Roman again. Of taking that magical connection into her hands once more, letting it slip over thresholds and cross war-torn kilometers.

โ€œI need you to help me break into the museum, Prindle.โ€

Sarah, to her credit, only blinked. โ€œAll right. And why would we do that?โ€

โ€œBecause I need to steal a typewriter.โ€

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