The beams of the police lanterns pierced the alley’s darkness. She kept her head down, praying that Charlie and Jack did the same. An eternity passed.

Finally, after she had aged fifty years, the police moved on.

She wouldn’t exhale, or breathe at all if she could help it, until the patrolmen were long gone. After their footsteps faded and several more minutes elapsed, she, Jack, and Charlie stumbled out of the alley, all of them gasping and coughing to clear their lungs.

Jack looked ashen, his knuckles white where he gripped the strap of his pack. The confined space had taken its toll on him.

Smiling, she took his hand and nodded toward the alley. “We ought to swap Simon’s mattress out for one of those.”

As she’d hoped, Jack chuckled, the pallor fading from his cheeks.

Turning, Eva discovered Charlie watching them curiously, as though they were a pair of cats who’d suddenly begun playing dice—entirely unexpected.

Eva tilted up her chin in wordless challenge. With a shrug, Charlie resumed striding down the street, and Eva and Jack followed.

The heavy smell of river water slunk through the air as they neared the Thames. A two-story official-looking building crouched a block from the Embankment, its columns and pediments streaked with soot. Spiked iron fencing encircled the structure, though the building itself was so gloomy and imposing, it seemed unlikely that anyone would fight to get inside. Only one light burned in an upper window.

Rather than lead them toward the main entrance, Charlie skirted around the building until she came to a side basement entry. She scraped her nails down the metal door.

Jack shifted restlessly beside Eva as they waited. She kept herself tense and waiting, alert should Charlie lead them into a trap.

Clanging like a knolling bell, the door opened and revealed a sallow man in a gray, baggy suit. His thin hair clung to his skull. He glanced first at Jack and Eva, wariness in his sunken eyes, then at Charlie with a dim flare of recognition.

“Charlie,” he intoned.

“Evening, Tiffield,” she answered briskly. “We’ve come to do a bit of shopping.”

The sallow man held the door open, and their party trooped inside. They found themselves standing in a long, tiled hallway, a few lamps burning dimly. The night had been chill, but within the building, it was even colder. A sweet, rank smell combined with the acrid scent of chemicals.

Tiffield unlocked another metal door and waved them in. Silently, they entered a dark, windowless chamber, and here the smell became stronger. Tiffield turned on the lamps.

No mistaking the contents—or rather, occupants—of the chamber. Rows of tables were covered with heavy waxed cloth, human bodies forming distinctive shapes beneath the fabric. There had to be at least three dozen corpses in here.

A morgue. Charlie had taken them “shopping” at the morgue.

“Looking for something in particular?” Tiffield asked with the same bored intonation as a shop clerk.

Charlie looked expectantly at Jack. Eva half expected the bookmaker to say, “Tell the man what you want, Jack.”

“A bloke about my size,” he answered. “Even better if he’s got dark hair and eyes.”

Scratching the skin behind his ear, the morgue attendant considered this for a moment. “May have a few who fit the bill.” Tiffield muttered to himself as he walked between the rows of cadavers.

“You all right?” Jack asked Eva quietly as they trailed after the morgue attendant.

“Perfectly,” she said. Though that wasn’t entirely true. She was no stranger to death, but she’d never been surrounded by its presence like this.

He looked concerned, yet didn’t press, for which she was grateful. He seemed to have an instinctive understanding of what she needed. The more someone coddled her, the more she struggled, their concern feeling like a pair of hands closing around her neck. But Jack let her breathe.

Tiffield stopped beside a table and, without preamble, flipped back the covering to reveal a body. “How about this one?”

“Seems a bit scrawny to me,” Charlie said critically.

“Hair color’s not right, either,” Jack noted.

“That can be dyed,” the morgue attendant suggested.

Eva pressed her fingertips to her mouth to hold back an inappropriate giggle. A dead man—someone with a whole history, a life now gone—lay in front of them, and they spoke as if discussing the suitability of a sofa. She’d thought herself hardened by her work with Nemesis, but clearly there was more for her to learn.

“Got anything else?” Charlie asked.

Tiffield flicked the cover back over the corpse and moved farther through the rows of bodies. The procedure was repeated as he uncovered another cadaver, and Charlie and Jack debated over its merits.

“This one’s throat is all torn up,” Jack complained.

“Got it cut over a woman,” Tiffield explained. “She didn’t come to claim ’im, though.”

“We need something with not too many visible wounds,” said Jack.

The morgue attendant heaved a sigh. “Sure got a lot of requirements.”

“It’s important,” Eva said dryly.

Tiffield covered the body and moved on to another. He pulled back the cloth, revealing the corpse beneath. “This here chap might suit. Come in earlier tonight. Was a bully for a bawdy house who got pushed down some stairs by a customer that argued the price. Snapped the bully’s neck. Think of it, a big bruiser like this gets done in by a man half his size.” Tiffield shook his head. “Ain’t no logic.”

The dead man had no argument for the morgue attendant. Whoever he was, whatever his name, he did closely match Jack’s size and build. It made Eva shiver, to see someone so like Jack stretched out in the indifference of death, his strength now utterly gone. To reassure herself that Jack was very much alive and strong as ever, she glanced up at him as he studied the body. He must have been entertaining similar thoughts, for his gaze was shadowed.

“Dark hair,” Charlie noted. “That’s good. But the mustache’s got to go.”

“Think there’s a razor somewhere about,” Tiffield said.

Without inflection, Jack said, “Go get it.”

The morgue attendant took a step, then asked, “You sure this is the one you want?”

“He’ll do,” Jack answered.

Tiffield scurried away, presumably to find shaving implements.

“Won’t someone notice if a body’s missing?” Eva asked.

“Not these lads.” Charlie waved an unconcerned hand at the rows of covered corpses. “No one comes to claim ’em, and the police don’t care about some dead—what’s the word?—reprobate. They’re unwanted.”

It seemed London was full of superfluous men.

“A hard world, this,” Jack murmured. His gaze met hers over the body. It was clear they thought the same thing—it could just have easily been him upon the table, unclaimed, growing colder, with no one to mourn his passing.

I would, she told him silently. For whatever solace it brings you, I would find the loss of you to be a hard burden.

Perhaps it was enough. She couldn’t know, but there was some satisfaction in his eyes, dark as darkest night.

She realized suddenly that there would come a time when she would lose him. When the mission was over, he couldn’t stay in England. He’d have to start his life over, somewhere far away. And she could never leave Nemesis—their work meant too much to her. Which meant that someday, if the mission was successful, she and Jack would never see each other again. The thought hollowed her.

Bustling in with a cup of foam and a razor, the morgue attendant set to work shaving the corpse’s face. “I ain’t a mortician,” he grumbled, “making a body pretty for a funeral.” Yet Tiffield didn’t stop in his task.

Once the dead man had been shaved, Jack produced a bundle of clothing from the pack he carried and tossed them toward Tiffield.

“Put those on him,” Jack said.

The morgue attendant studied the wad of garments. “They look just like your clothes.”

“Never you mind that,” Charlie snapped. “Just get the stiff dressed.”

Tiffield complained under his breath again, but pulled the garments onto the cadaver. Eva winced at the rough, impersonal way the morgue attendant handled the body, as if it were nothing more than a haunch of meat at Smithfield Market. Her one consolation was that rigor mortis hadn’t yet set in.

“There,” Tiffield announced. “All nice and handsome for you.”

“Needs one more thing,” Charlie said. From a pocket in her skirt she produced a flask, and splashed strong-smelling whiskey across the body’s chest and face. “Now he ain’t dead, just dead drunk.”

Though the words felt odd and sour in her mouth, Eva asked, “How much do we pay you for the … body?”

Tiffield started to speak, glanced at Charlie, then stopped. After a moment, he said, “Nothing.”

Eva looked back and forth between the morgue attendant and Charlie. Clearly, Tiffield was in some kind of debt to the bookmaker, but whether it was a financial debt or another kind of obligation, Eva wasn’t certain—nor did she want to know. The many faces of London were often ugly, and possessing a certain amount of believable deniability often worked in one’s favor.

Before Tiffield could change his mind, Jack hefted the body onto his back. “Blimey, he’s a heavy bugger,” he said through gritted teeth.

“We weighed him yesterday,” the morgue attendant said. “Over sixteen stone.”

“Me, too,” Jack muttered.

“Got to go now, Tiffield,” Charlie announced. “Standard terms apply.”

“I know” was the sullen answer. “I never saw you. I don’t remember anything.”

Charlie strode to Tiffield and patted his face. “Good lad.”

The woman could give lessons in sheer audacity, Eva decided.

In short order, they were back outside. Eva breathed out in relief to be away from so many corpses, but her sigh was short-lived as she pointedly remembered the dead man Jack carried. She, Jack, and Charlie gathered far away from incriminating light.

“Where do we send payment?” she asked Charlie.

“Don’t trouble yourself about it,” the bookmaker answered.

“I don’t carry debts,” Jack growled. “Tell me what I owe, and it’ll get paid.”

Charlie’s smile was singularly ominous. “Sorry, ducks. The where, when, and what—that’s up to me to decide.” Cheerfully, she said, “Good to see you out of the clink, Jack. And it’s been a pleasure, Miss Prim,” she added with a wink. “Have a charming evening.”

Before Eva could object to her unflattering sobriquet, Charlie seemed to melt into the shadows. One moment she was there. The next, nothing. Eva strained to hear even the lightest footstep on the pavement. But Charlie had vanished.

Eva wasn’t sorry to see her go.

Grunting, Jack shifted beneath the weight of the body. “Feels like I’m carrying my own corpse.”

“You are.” Despite her cavalier words, she felt all too aware of the similarities between him and the dead man.

Jack snorted. “What do the toffs say? Indubitably. Now let’s go get me killed.”

*   *   *

The gaming club was the sort of place gentlemen liked to frequent. It trod the line between seedy and smart that seemed to draw well-heeled blokes by the cartload. Not quite as elegant as the clubs of St. James’s, not as unsavory as the dens clustered near Covent Garden. Jack knew from experience that the club kept a few girls upstairs, but for the most part the men came to play cards and roulette, drink too much and laugh too loud.

Rockley was inside. He came here every Thursday, but just to be certain, he checked the mews behind the club and saw the bastard’s carriage. The hour approached four, when Rockley usually left and headed home to sleep the sleep of the conscienceless. Eva was in place. All Jack had to do now was wait in the shadows across the street.

Except he’d done far too much waiting in the past, and it scratched him now. If everything went well in the next few minutes, he’d be that much closer to finally gaining vengeance. If everything didn’t go well, tomorrow Tiffield would be showing off his corpse to some new interested buyer.

A sick despair climbed up his throat, and he spat upon the ground to rid himself of it. Now wasn’t the time to think about the shortness of his life, or how he’d leave this world without a soul to care whether he was alive or taking up space in the city morgue.

No, that wasn’t true. There was Eva. He’d seen how she had looked at him back in that place of death. As if he mattered to her. More than a pawn in Nemesis’s game. More than a former brawler, failed murderer, and escaped convict.