Chapter Twenty
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Chapter Twenty

 

The revolution is not decided in the city. It never is; or rather, it is never settled where one might assume it would be. Revolutions, politics, wars, all are truly fought and won in small rooms far removed from the conflict, decided by a select and terrifyingly disparate group of people who might otherwise never interact with the issue at hand. Miss Blackburne iterates and reiterates this point through the duration of the entire walk over, ensuring that every member of their group understood their place in the events at hand. 

As the evening arrives under a gloomy sky, smoke continues to trickle up from various places across Bellchester. The afternoon of fighting showed no signs of stopping, and as Annette feared, it only seems to escalate as night drops down to cover them all. An array of gunshots sound out through the streets and alleys, accompanied by police whistles, overturned barricades, and the cries of dozens upon dozens of people. Each step that carries Annette out of the city feels very nearly like betrayal. She knows she wouldn’t last very long out in the chaos of it all, and yet it leaves a bitter taste in her mouth to imagine just how many of her friends and comrades might be fighting for their lives and their futures in the streets. 

Morrigan leads the march out of the city, accompanied by Annette, Cordelia,and a half dozen guards who provided no form of identification to their organization. The easiest guess is that they are simply mercenaries, hired by Pemberly for whatever purposes Miss Blackburne requires, but Annette suspects anything regarding the woman would resist simple explanation. Her self-disclosure of occupying an administrative role for Pemberly Exports falls more and more into question with each moment they interact, and it is difficult for Annette to overlook the curious terror with which Cordelia holds her in. And so, as Annette turns the loaded revolver in her hand over and over and over, gazing out on the glowing lights of Lamishton in the countryside, a half mile away, she does begin to believe the true battle lay before them. 

“You don’t have to use it,” Cordelia says to Annette, her voice low and cautious as they stand apart from the rest of their party. 

Annette is surprised by how heavy the pistol feels in her hands. She’d held them before and was always struck by their weight, so dense and so compact, yet this particular one is notably heavier. “You don’t load a weapon you won’t intend to use,” Annette utters back to her, voice hollow and weak. 

“You didn’t load it,” Cordelia rebuts. 

Annette purses her lips and raises her hand, aimlessly pointing the barrel out towards the countryside. “And yet it is ready to fire nonetheless.” 

The sound of grass giving way underfoot pulls her attention away and she drops the weapon to her side once more. Morrigan strolls over to them, her guards tending to the captured courier behind her. The poor errand boy had been on his way to Lamishton when they caught him, and it had taken very little encouragement to pry information out from him. 

“We’re ready to move,” Morrigan stops, tucking her hands behind her back. 

Annette steals another glance at the grand estate before them, perhaps a half mile away. “Your men have finished scouting the area?” 

“Annette,” Morrigan exhales, as though disappointed. “Everything before you has been planned and prepared for weeks. You are simply the last to know it.” 

Her face turns sour and she looks away, fiddling with the pistol in her hand. “Apologies if this is my first coup.” 

“More of a civil war,” Cordelia shrugs. “Benton & Hayle are not yet the ruling power of this land.” 

Annette sighs. “You seem calm.” 

“I’m not,” the detective replies quickly. 

“Done correctly, this will be entirely, or very nearly, bloodless,” Morrigan assures them. “The courier has confirmed the presence of both Winchester brothers as well as Arthur Hayle. We remove this triumvirate and the leadership of the conspiracy collapses.” With that, Morrigan nods, confident and resolute, and she returns to check in with her soldiers. 

“That woman is something else…” Annette grumbles. 

“Oh, I expect to be staring down the barrel of her revolver at some point,” Cordelia pips back, her voice absent of any humor.

“Ever the optimist.” 

Cordelia smiles, though it is difficult to tell if it is from acknowledgement or from nerves. She shakes her head, holstering her own pistol into a place carefully hidden at her beltline at the back of her coat, and gestures for Annette to do the same. “Despite it all,” she says, “I do adore the focused glow in your eyes in moments such as these.” 

“Unfortunately, Miss Jones,” Annette flicks her eyes over at the detective, her brows low and tight, “it seems you are attracted to my fear.” 

“Less afraid that you believe yourself to be,” Cordelia prescribes. “I daresay future investigations may run the risk of leaving you quite bored when this is all settled.” 

“God, I hope you’re wrong.” 

“Chin up, this will surely-,”

Cordelia is interrupted by a sharp and crisp whistle from Morrigan, who waves at them to indicate it was time to go. Annette pauses on the backs of her heels, rocking in place for just a moment before nodding and joining the rest of the group, followed closely behind Cordelia. The detective had been resolute to ensure that Annette was never further than ten feet from her since they left the city. 

They move through the fields towards Lamishton in the fading light of the arriving evening, baptizing them into near total darkness by the time they reach the hedged gates surrounding the property. One of the Pemberly guards carefully pulls open a space through the green wall, quiet and deliberate, and they enter one by one into the back gardens. Annette isn’t totally sure if they’d meet resistance as they approach, though it seems the Winchester’s possess a small reserve of private guards scattered across their property. Morrigan’s forces catch them by surprise, either grabbing hold of them and strangling them to unconsciousness or catching them by surprise and forcing their surrender. They arrive at the back entrance without any real trouble. 

From there, Morrigan turns to her guards and orders, “Mallory, Daniels, Kellen, I want you to watch this route. Keep prisoners quiet, don’t let anyone in or out. The rest are with me.” She waits for their nods of acknowledgement, then faces Annette and asks, “You’ve been here recently; where do you believe we ought to search first?” 

Annette should be less surprised than she is that Morrigan was aware of her previous visit, but she finds the reminder of her reach annoying. “It’s evening,” she replies, “I would suggest Lord Winchester’s study.” 

“Interesting,” Morrigan considers, only to add, “and incorrect. They will be at dinner. Quick as you can.” She turns and steals down the hallway, making her way towards the dining room like it was her own home and she required no level of thought to navigate it. 

Cordelia arrives at Annette’s side and whispers, “While it is past dinnertime, events of the day will have distracted them and kept them away from the table. Hence, a late dinner.” 

And then they are outside of the dining room, stacking up alongside the double doors whilst the Pemberly forces use their weapons to discourage any of the servants passing by from interfering or making any noise. Annette briefly wonders what Miss Pennywise would think of the two of them now, stalking outside the dinner table of her new owners, prepared to take extreme measures to oppose them. 

“Miss Baker, Jones, why don’t you lead our entrance?” Morrigan suggests, nodding to the two of them. “I’m sure they would be delighted to encounter familiar faces.” Annette and Cordelia share a look, weighing the possibility of betrayal. To Annette’s relief, the detective passes along an assured and resolute nod. Annette takes hold of one of the doorknobs, turning it as slowly as she can as Cordelia brandishes her pistol and prepares to charge in. 

The moment the door opens the room is under their control. Cordelia marches in, hardly even needing to shout in order to assert order. “Hands on the table, no sudden movements,” she directs. Annette follows quickly behind her, joined thereafter by Morrigan’s group. It isn’t a full table as they had hoped, but each of them turn to the occupying force.

“He’s not here,” Annette calls out. There’s only three figures at the table: Lucien Winchester, Arthur Hayle, and his wife, Elizabeth Hayle. 

Lucien makes to stand, growing, “I’ll not tolerate such-,”
Morrigan scowls and decides not to humor his aggravation, choosing to strike him with the butt end of her pistol to silence him. Lucian falls forward into his dinner plate, groaning and growling. 

“Where’s your brother?” The woman demands. 

Lucian frowns, gazing up at her like the question made no sense to him. “He’s been dead for over a year.” 

“Incorrect,” Cordelia shrugs, spinning her revolver in her hand as she leans up against one of the cabinets adorning the walls around the room. “Your brother has been assisting you and Mr. Hayle in leading the Mallets.” 

“Tell us where he is,” Annette adds. 

“Christ,” Lucien glowers, pulling his eyes up to stare disdainfully at Annette, “you again.” 

She turns to Morrigan and smirks. “Please hit him again.” She does. 

“Arthur,” Morrigan shifts her focus, pulling out a chair for herself at the table and staring down the Baron, “perhaps your wife would like to answer some questions for us?” She tilts her revolver at the cowering woman beside him. 

Elizabeth devolves before them, immediately crashing under the pressure of interrogation and threat. “I-I don’t know anything of what is happening here!” 

“Not lying,” Cordelia mutters across the room. 

“Then I turn my question to Arthur instead,” Morrigan shrugs, sliding the barrel of her gun towards the Baron’s chest. “Where is Darrius?” 

To his credit, Arthur Hayle stares down the woman as though being held at gunpoint was a usual dinnertime activity of his. He removes the napkin from his lap and carefully folds it onto the table before him, gently informing them that he, “will not answer questions on terms as unfavorable as this.” 

“Arthur, dear,” his wife stammers beside him, “whatever this is, I believe you ought to-,”

“Apologies, Mrs. Hayle,” Annette interrupts, feeling a twinge of pity in watching the woman defend such a wretched man. “I’m not sure your husband is likely to take your feelings much into consideration. He is, in fact, quite the prolific adulterer, if his conversations with Lord Winchester are to be believed.” 

Elizabeth’s face grows sour, scorn replacing fear. “I’m aware,” she grumbles. 

Cordelia lets out a quick bark of laughter across the room and sighs, “Ah, the enlightenment of noble aspirations.” 

Arthur Hayle raises an eyebrow, but to his credit, or perhaps condemnation, he does not speak further. He sits his broad shoulders back into his chair and crosses one leg over another, hands tucked neatly into his lap. He tilts his chin away from his interrogator and gives her a stiff upper lip. Lucien frowns, glaring at Morrigan as if to say, You’re not going to hit him? 

“Darrius Winchester is in this house,” Morrigan relents, seemingly deciding the Baron wasn’t worth the trouble. She turns to Annette and Cordelia and says, “You two scout the rest of the home. We’ll hold these ones here and take charge of the ground floor.” 

“And if we find him…?”

A spark of excitement flashes behind the woman’s eyes. “I’m fascinated to see what you’ll do.” 

Cordelia leaves the room first, departing without much contestation of the plan, so Annette follows her. It takes great effort not to take the detective by the hand once they shut the doors behind themselves, comforting one another as they face off into the unknown. Though, as tempting as grabbing Cordelia’s palm and pulling her out into the night to escape this all is, Annette doesn’t even need to ask to know that neither of them would truly consider abandoning this moment. The end was at hand, ready to meet them both. 

Annette leads the way through Lamishton, having explored it more than the detective, and she guides the two of them down the long corridors of the second floor, moving wing by wing to ensure they were empty. The study where she’d first found Winchester is empty, as is the one where she overheard him speaking with Arthur Hayle. The servant’s quarters are full of people, held at bay by Morrigan’s forces, though there is no sign of Miss Pennywise. For her sake, Annette hopes she is holed up in some dark corner of the house and waiting out the storm. She’d almost considered passing by the wing that had once housed the Deveroux’s on her prior visit to the estate when a noise alerts her. It’s a dull thump of something dense falling to the ground, difficult to assume is anything other than a body being dropped to the floor. She and Cordelia station themselves outside the door, and once more she allows the detective to charge into the room first as she swings the handle open. 

A voice shouts from inside, high and panicked, only to be quickly silenced by whoever its aggressor was. In a decision Annette cannot fully remember making, she enters the room with her pistol tucked neatly into the pocket of her coat. She’d never had a holster for it, instead electing to keep it tucked away like spare change, and she possesses neither the skill to draw it nor the will to use it to make it more easily accessible. And so, as she and Cordelia race past the familiar living room and towards the bedroom, where the sound emanated, Annette charges weaponless. 

She can see in Cordelia’s eyes that the detective considers firing once the scene forms before her, but a moment of indecision freezes her. Duels and gunfights are nearly always resolved in the first milliseconds of decisions that overcome a person; either through preparation or instinct one wins or loses a battle. Cordelia’s surprise upon seeing Samantha bound and tossed to the floor defeats her, as does Annette’s decision to place her own weapon so deep into her own coat. The Admiral plays the winning move before the battle even occurs; his weapon drawn and pointed directly at the cowering Lady Deveroux beside him. 

“Drop your weapons,” he commands them. Cordelia pauses, then nods and slowly crouches. She places it a foot to her right. Revier’s steely gaze meets Annette and directs, “Yours, too.” 

Annette’s eyes meet Samantha’s, frightenedly scanning her figure to assess the damage. Her words catch in her throat, leaving Cordelia to speak up in her defense, quickly replying, “She hasn’t the stomach for weapons.” She exhales and follows the barrel of the gun to its soon-to-be victim. “Lady Deveroux.” 

Samantha is bound and gagged, sporting a deep purple bruise in the place just above her right eye. Her cheek presses into the rug, and the fact that she was wearing a lovely gown suggests she was not expecting such an assault from her husband. Her eyes race between Cordelia and Annette, pleading for their intervention. 

“What have you done to her?” Annette croaks. 

The pistol rises from Samantha and finds its way to Annette’s chest instead. “A close friend of mine informed me this evening that my wife has a terrible habit… one you would know all about.” 

Cordelia takes a half step forward, prompting Revier to switch his target to her. “Annette, I believe you ought to press on. Darrius is not here.” 

She isn’t going anywhere!” 

“I’m not leaving you,” Annette says, glancing at both of the women in the room. 

The detective takes another step forward, slowly removing her coat from her shoulders and letting it drop to the floor. “Revier, I’ve heard recently you’re an accomplished boxer. Best aboard your vessel, are you not?” 

“Shut your mouth,” he brandishes the weapon once more. 

“Do you believe you’ll retain your position once word gets out you were too frightened to box a woman?” Cordelia is now rolling up the sleeves to her button up. 

The Admiral snorts disdainfully. “It’d be dishonorable to box one.” 

“Consider this a formal challenge,” she grins, tossing her fear back and giving into scheming instead. “I’ve bested Conrad, Travers, even Johnson. Imagine word getting out that you were too frightened to face me? Humiliating.” She tilts her head back and tells Annette, “Take my coat, will you?” It is then that Annette realizes Cordelia’s greater ploy. She dropped her coat directly onto her pistol, covering it completely. It would take very little effort to pick them both up, giving them an easy advantage over him. The detective takes another half step forward. “Let’s settle this as gentlemen do.” 

“You’re no gentleman,” Revier spits. 

“Neither will you be when you lose,” she smirks. “Lady Deveroux, I apologize in advance for your husband’s future embarrassment. Or, should he choose not to fight me, I apologize for revealing he is a coward.” 

There were many men who could resist such a taunt; who could look it in the eyes and decide not to stoop to its pitiful level. Men like this were immune to the haunted hills of status and reputation, easily able to shrug off personal assaults in favor of a greater sense of self. Revier, the playboy Admiral, the man who cared for little else than having another story to tell, another reputation to sell, was not one of these men. He discards his pistol and prepares to box, resolute in the promise he would defeat her nonetheless. 

“Miss Baker, press on, will you?” She directs. Annette frowns at her, baffled by the reality that she did, indeed, wish to box this man. It would be far easier to have Annette simply turn the pistol upon him and take him down. But the detective seems assured in her decision, taunting the Admiral once more. “If it helps your fighting spirit, Admiral, I suspect I’ve laid with your dear wife on more occasions than either you or Annette, and I likely pleasured her far more.” She winks at him, to his great disgust. “Miss Baker?” 

“At once,” Annette nods, escaping the room and leaving Cordelia to defend the woman she’d once discarded. 

– – – 

 

Darrius is in the final room that Annette searches, far back into the dark corners of the home. He’d apparently blown out most of the laps in the corridors, leaving them eerie and quiet. She marches down the hall with her own pistol still tucked deep into her pocket, wielding Cordelia’s between her palms. She knows she ought to simply shoot at him the moment she sees him, knows that it would do the most to guarantee her own safety, but there remains that part of her that is unsure of her capacity. Could she truly kill a man, especially one she’d so recently respected? So she enters the room with her gun only partially raised, there to establish potential threat without actually making one. 

“Miss Baker?” A voice askes, its owner facing the window. “Close the door, if you’d be so kind.”

“How terrible it would be to be overheard,” she muses, but allows him this. The room is small, just a tiny library tucked away in the corner of the house. A desk separates her from the former revolutionary, who turns and deposits his pistol onto the hardwood before him. 

“I presume you have questions,” Darrius invites, his voice dropping the timber of his former persona. He was no longer rough-voiced and principled, commanding and hardened. He sounds regal, elegant, his voice twinged with the shared accent of the gentry. 

“As I am sure you do.”

He nods, setting himself down into the chair and gesturing for her to do the same. “Place your weapon on the table and sit.” He then waits for Annette to obey, which she does with some hesitation, and says, “Speak.” 

Annette sifts through the collection of statements and complaints she’d formed ever since she’d learned of his treachery. She lands on the question: “Did you ever believe any of the things you’ve said?” 

“When I was young, and foolish,” he admits, crossing his leg over the other and pressing his back deeper into his seat. Darrius seems unconcerned with the ability to remain in reach of his weapon, a fact which leaves Annette to suspect he was more than confident he could use it before she could retrieve her own. “Did you?” 

“Of course I do.”

He releases a low chuckle and shakes his head. “I disagree.” 

“Please, enlighten me as to how you know me better than I do.” 

He grins, almost amused. When he speaks, his polished voice is filled with rampant paternalism, the confidence of a man who believed himself to understand the whole world before him. “You have ulterior motives, you’re no Mallet. You’re a pretend detective trying to keep up appearances for an owner you delude yourself into loving.” 

Annette furrows her brows. “Was I pretending when I gave up everything to join the cause?” 

He bats a hand in the air to wave away her response, brushing it aside into nothingness. “You gave up nothing,” he contests. “As soon as you would be in too deep you knew you could run back to her. You did.” He shuffles in his seat, looking as though he wished to remove his pipe from his pocket to smoke. “Honestly, Annette, your heart begs to be in service, and I was almost ready to respect you for it. But, colluding with Pemberly is an unfortunate low for you. Pitiful.” He then retrieves his pipe, along with tobacco and a match, and lights it. 

“You’re a traitor to your class as well,” she sneers back. “You’re just as guilty of colluding with the Barons.” 

“Industry is the future,” he shrugs, letting out a puff of smoke. “Any aristocrat with a drop of common sense can see it. To hitch yourself to the Barons is to save your place of power in the evolving world.” Darrius nods, giving himself a few more breaths to smoke as he studies her reaction. “No, I am not disappointed in you for your class treachery or anything of the sort. I'm disappointed that you believe your fundamental nature to be changeable. It isn’t.” He waves his pipe in the air, allowing it to stick upon some of his words to accent the point. He jabs the end of it towards her to make his next accusation. “Annette, if I must call you that, you are neither woman nor detective. You are simply a being amongst the race of men set aside to provide a platform for men such as myself to stand upon. It is the natural order of the world.” 

Annette is almost disappointed to understand his thinking further. It was so pitifully typical of a ruling man, so boring and unimaginative. “And so,” she rebuts, “by shaking your platform my kind might cast you down to the dirt.” 

“I’m sure it’s working out well for you lot,” he bobs his head towards the window, gesturing back towards the revolting city behind him. “Regardless, you’re going to die in but a moment. I simply wished for you to understand your place before facing the great oblivion.” He releases another breath of smoke, continuing on as though giving a grand lecture. “It is the flawed nature of the working man to believe ascension is within their grasp. They inevitably arise to the collective delusion of attaining power, only to be defeated time and time again. It is pitifully inefficient.” 

“So you’ve industrialized their revolution,” Annette summarizes. “Sped it up for them and control it so you can crush it all the more quickly.” 

“A work in progress,” he admits. “It is a fine line to walk for success. The mules require a reminder of the whip, just as the ants need to be retaught the fear of the boot. When the Mallets fall, there will be political will to tighten our grip, and we will have blissful peace until the next generation requires the same education.” 

“And here I was,” Annette frowns at him, the back of her mind racing through ideas of how to survive the next few minutes, “afraid your only motivation was greed. Ideologically deluded is far more interesting.” 

Darrius tosses her a grim smile, rolling his shoulders and extinguishing his pipe. In one quick motion he has recovered his pistol, resting it into the soft flesh of his palm. “And so you meet your end with something more enlightening. How kind of me. Where would you like the bullet to land?” 

“You believe yourself to be a faster draw than me?” Annette asks, but her heart isn’t in the challenge. She’s buying herself time as the idea forms in her head. She crosses her arms over her chest, remembering that while Cordelia’s pistol was on the table before her, her own was still tucked away into her coat pocket. 

“I know well you do not have the capacity to kill within you.” 

Annette smirks. “I failed so spectacularly with the Deacon.” 

“Indeed,” he tilts his head. 

She releases a breath, sighing as though to say, this may as well end now. Same time next week? “I should like the bullet in the back of my head. I’d prefer not to have to see it.” 

“Then kneel and face the door,” he commands, rising and taking Cordelia’s revolver as he moves. 

Annette exits the chair with her heart pounding in her chest. The plan formed inside with a frightful clarity, and now all that was left was to play it just right. She tries to control her shaking hands, then decides not to. She moves them in such a way that he can see her trembling, then buries her palms into her pockets as though embarrassed by this fact. Her fingers brush alongside the cool iron of her revolver, desperately trying not to allow its bulge to show through her coat. She tosses a look over to the bar table in the corner of the room and asks: 

“Before I depart, might I have a drink?” 

“It is already an act of kindness of me to allow you to choose the position,” he scolds, stepping over to the cart to pull out a fanciful bottle of bourbon. “This liquor is far too expensive to be wasted on you.” He pours himself a drink, sipping at it briefly before setting it down, assuredly expecting to finish it after disposing of her. She uses his quick moment of distraction to flip the pistol around in her pocket, turning it so that the barrel faces the same direction as her back. 

“I defer to your wisdom,” she mutters, trying to steel herself for what would need to be done. 

Darrius takes a step into position, slowly preparing himself for the execution. Each ticking second is agonizing for Annette, as she does her best to guess what angle would be needed to make the shot. He would need to be close, far closer than he was now. She would have to wait until he was nearly pulling the trigger before she could fire. Annette carefully tips the barrel back and up, sliding her finger towards the firing lever. 

And then the barrel of his revolver is on the back of her head, the very same weapon that bears the Winchester crest prominently on it. He takes a long and low breath, almost as though savoring the position of power over her, reveling in the terror rocking through her. She releases her own breath, passing it off as though preparing to meet whatever maker may reside beyond the pale. She waits until the first metallic click of his finger touching the mechanism that would cock the gun enters the space, and then she squeezes her finger. 

Her ears ring painfully as the bullet rips through her coat, and Darrius howls into the air as it strikes him. Annette leaps down onto the floor, tossing herself to the side to avoid any potential shot from his weapon, and drags herself to her feet as quickly as possible. There wasn’t a true chance her shot would be a fatal one, and if she didn’t move with haste, he would easily be able to fire one of his own at her in the tiny room. She leaps up at him, crashing her shoulder into his chest, his shirt stained with a spreading pool of blood that emanates from his abdomen. Darrius towers over her, and is heavily built and muscled, but Annette’s momentum and his surprise gives her an edge. He crashes back into the hardwood desk, slamming down into it with almost enough force to crack it in half. 

His left hand punches at her and Annette allows it to strike her, focusing instead on attacking his right hand. His fist cracks into her cheek and sends her flying to the side, tumbling onto the side of the desk. She catches herself quickly and goes after his right arm, first trying to simply crash her knuckles into his wrist to release it without much success. She pins his arm down with both of his hands while his left fist strikes her again, this time on the back of her head, causing Annette to see an array of flashing lights in her eyes. She pushes past the feeling, dropping her head down to bite his right hand with her teeth as hard as she can. He yelps out once more and drops the pistol, which Annette kicks under the desk. 

She buys herself just a brief moment of respite, only to find herself launched back onto the floor. She scurries to her feet and does her best to ignore the throbbing pain in her head, only to be cast down again as Darrius pushes her into the door. Her forehead strikes it hard, further exacerbating the pain inside of it, and for a moment she wonders if this truly was the room she was going to die in. 

But Darrius’ exertion only worsens the wound in his chest, and the hacking breath his fights through gives her just enough time to grab the doorknob and throw it open, stumbling out into the hallway. She bolts down the darkened corridor as fast as her feet will carry her, turning a corner and pressing herself flat against the wall to lie in wait. She shoves her hand into her tattered coat pocket and fights to remove the pistol, frantically checking to ensure it was ready to fire again. 

His heavy boots thunder against the floor as he marches forward, slow and sluggish. Darrius heaves out with each exhale, coughing and sputtering, and his voice cries out in anger as he moves. Annette stifles her own breath as best as possible, nearly choking as her lungs beg for air, but she forces herself to remain quiet. She lifts the gun to her chest, ready to fire the moment he got close enough that she wouldn’t be afraid of missing. 

But the moment doesn’t arrive. Instead, Darrius Winchester drops to the floor, his face pressing deep into the carpet, his blood spilling out through the fabric. He hacks and coughs, his hands gripping the ground as he tries to pull himself back up, yet he fails. Annette slowly turns the corner and faces him, shuddering as the light leaves his eyes. 

As much as she grew to resent him in his final moments, as frightened of him as she was, Annette despises watching him die. It rends something inside of herself to know that she has killed someone, that she has committed such an evil, even if in defense. She drops to her knees and allows her breath to spiral beyond her control, heaving and gasping like there was no end to her need for air. She tosses the weapon aside, unable to stomach the feeling of holding it any longer, and she cries. Something wretched churns in her gut, and her arms and ears and face feel warm and rank. 

And then she remembers Cordelia and the feeling escapes her. She pushes all of her horror and dread aside and shuffles to her feet, clumsily jogging down the hallways towards the wing where the Deveroux’s had been staying. She neglects to bring the gun with her, unable to bear the weight of it any longer. She pulls open the door to the wing, unsure of what she was expecting to find, and is relieved to see Revier laying back on his face, unconscious, while the detective slowly and carefully removes Lady Deveroux’s bindings. 

Cordelia turns to her and her face washes with fear. Her eyes scan over Annette, and for the first time she realizes her shirt and coat were smeared with Darrius Winchester’s blood. “Christ, are you hurt?” 

Annette shakes her head, feeling her brain descend into a fog. “H-his blood, not mine,” she squeaks out, relieved to find Cordelia unharmed. “My head is ringing.” 

Cordelia wraps her arms around the former servant, tucking her head into her chest. “Is he…?”

“Dead? Yes,” Annette chokes out. 

“Don’t think on it now,” the detective’s hand strokes her head, trying to keep her calm and steady. “Only focus on the knowledge you are alive to process this tomorrow.” Annette nods into her shoulder. “Take a seat while I free Samantha, and we’ll leave this wretched scene.” 

Annette drops into a chair and stares at the floor before her. Her head spins slightly, aching in the place where it struck against the door. She takes a low and skating breath, watching her hands tremble in front of her eyes. 

“I find myself in the unusual position of being grateful for you, Cordelia,” Samantha is saying. “How novel.” 

“I’ll be sure to disappoint you in the near future,” the detective quips back cheerfully, “so that all may be right in the world once more.” 

“If… if it is alright with you, Miss Jones,” Annette pulls her head up to face Cordelia, her voice weak and weary, “I believe I may allow myself to faint now.” 

Annette doesn’t wait for a reply. Her body takes charge, giving in to the exhaustion and pain consuming her. She falls forward from her seat, narrowly caught by Cordelia before she strikes the floor. The last thing she recalls is the detective whispering, “Permission granted, Miss Baker.”

 

– – – 

 

It takes three days for the remainder of the revolution to end in Bellchester, and when it does end, Annette is grateful that the loss of life appears to be minimal. It’s difficult to gather a full total, but she relaxes into the knowledge that the chaos was over. She watches the smoke clear from the view of her window, wondering and wondering what might have occurred should she have never been involved in any of it. 

Morrigan Blackburne keeps her promise. She is hard at work representing Pemberly Exports in the aftermath of it all, and with Annette’s insistence, she ensures that the blame is placed squarely on Benton & Hayle and the Winchesters, not upon the working classes. It is a fine line to walk, and often many of the crown’s investigators harass Cordelia in the hopes of getting her to slip and confess to some crime, to name members of the Mallets, but she never does. Four weeks after the death of Darrius Winchester, collar service officially ends in the county. It takes another month for it to end in the entire country.

Unsure of how to reconcile anything she’s witnessed, and unsure of what to do with herself as Cordelia busies herself with the cleanup of an investigation, full of court dates and testimonies and backroom negotiations, Annette finds herself visiting Mary Rosen once more. It feels right, in some satisfying way, to ensure she knows the full story. The death of Henry Rosen had brought them all to this point, and yet it was so easy to forget that the case had started so small. The grieving woman appreciates her visit, serves her tea and asks her questions, and tells her all about the funeral for Henry. 

And when Annette tells Mary about Morrigan Blackburne, the woman frowns and tilts her head to the side, scratching her chin and wondering aloud, “Where have I heard that name before?” And then it dawns upon her, and she disappears into the other room for a moment, returning with a letter in hand. She tells Annette that it arrived the day of Henry’s death, alongside the letter that had first informed her of Henry’s death. She gives it to Annette and tells her it is what brought her to them, what informed her that there was a detective that might help her after all. She waits until she leaves Mary Rosen’s home to open it, and she stops on her front porch to pull it open. 

 

Dear Mrs. Rosen, 

 

I am distraught to hear the unfortunate news of your son’s passing. It is a terrible tragedy to lose one’s child, and even more painful to learn that it was under such terrible circumstances. One of my colleagues knew Henry as a trusted friend, valued coworker, and inspired mechanic. He was greatly angered to learn that all of Henry’s appeals to Mister Bembrook were discarded, and that Henry is the one who suffered for it. 

Should you like to seek greater answers to this, I believe you may well have grounds for an investigation into this situation. There is no finer detective in this town than Cordelia Jones. I am sure that if you seek her out at her home, 167th Mill Street, she will surely assist you in this pursuit. 

 

A friend of a friend, 

Morrigan Blackburne.

 

And it is as Annette reads the sloping cursive of Morrigan’s pen, as she settles into the realization of who set them upon this path in the first place, that she feels the unmistakable tremor at the base of her spine. Everything before you has been planned and prepared for weeks. You’re simply the last to know it. 

And now, Annette knew it. 

 

 

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