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  The Mystery of Emerald Flame

  Verity Fitzroy and the Ministry Seven: Book 2

  Pip Ballantine

  Contents

  Also from Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris

  Your Free Book

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  About the Author

  Also from Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris

  The Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences Series

  Phoenix Rising

  The Janus Affair

  Dawn’s Early Light

  The Diamond Conspiracy

  The Ghost Rebellion

  Anthology

  Ministry Protocol: Thrilling Tales from the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences

  Listen to Tee and Pip on the Shared Desk Podcast

  Imagine That! Studios, Copyright 2018

  All rights reserved.

  Interior Layout by Imagine That! Studios

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means whatsoever without the prior written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any person, living or dead is purely coincidental. Any actual places, products or events mentioned are used in a purely fictitious manner.

  www.ministryofpeculiaroccurrences.com

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  Click here to get your free download

  Chapter One

  Evil in the Mist

  November was the month King Fog ruled London, and even the Ministry Seven gave him his due. Standing on a street in Bethnal Green she knew, it might as well have been Mars to Verity Fitzroy.

  Staying close to the wrought iron gas lamp, this small sphere of the city was hers alone—which could have been cosy—but was very far from it. The yellow tinged fog closed in tight on her so dense and thick it completely cut her off from anyone. In point of fact, when she thrust her arm out into it, her own hand disappeared into the fog, like she was a ghost herself. Then there was the matter of the acrid taste in the mouth which she found impossible to shake even though she wore a linen mask over her face.

  In short, if horror waited for ideal weather conditions then this was it. It was the time of the murderer, the robber and the rapist, in short not a very good time for a young person of any age to be out on the street.

  Not even God was able to help anyone with a lung or heart complaint, they should simply set about dying forthwith. She wondered if Uncle Octavius was out there somewhere biding his time, with the piece of the world machine she’d allowed him to take from her. It was the reason she’d been eager to come out into the fog to help the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences. It wasn’t the first time she’d leapt at the chance to investigate something mysterious with the hope it was connected with Octavius.

  Children were always disappearing from London’s streets—that happened every day of the week. Recently though children were being carried off by something ghostly in the fog. On the fourth day, and she went to Harrison Thorne to offer the particular services of the Seven. These were not children of the aristocracies, but those of the street, and thus their people. Also, no one much cared if London had a few less ragamuffins on the streets. Some might even call it a blessing.

  Adjusting the linen mask, Verity tried not to let paranoia overcome her. She’d made the masks for all of the children of the Seven, but it could only do so much to filter out the Peculiar. She was a healthy fifteen years old, but even so the fog pressed down on her, her lungs working extra hard to get oxygen from this mire.

  The only comfort in all this was the hard bean shape of the aether tracker from the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences tucked under her dress against her collarbone. Out in the fog the other child of the Seven also wore them, while their handler Agent Harrison Thorne stood ready with backup in a nearby building.

  This was how the street urchins of her little group earned their crust and even more than that, they were on the trail of a child murderer, and not the kind that Scotland Yard could be trusted to find. The Ministry and consequently the Seven who worked for them on the streets of London, did not deal in anything resembling normal.

  Standing on the street corner, clutching a basket full of wilting violets, she waited while trying desperately not to watch the fog. If something ghostly was looking for children, then she made herself look as young as possible in order to lure them; tying her hair in braids and wearing a dress more suitable for a twelve-year-old. It did not sit well with her, but better than an actual twelve-year old being nabbed.

  The question was, how exactly could anyone see their prey in this much saffron coloured fog? They must have some supernatural powers or a contraption to help see. The other Seven children were very close, since this area was where the kidnapper struck four times in the last few days.

  Since all of the victims were various ages, races, and sexes, the Seven hoped to find him, and by tracking him bring him to justice.

  Standing on this street for at least three hours Verity started to doubt her own sanity. The mist began to contain patterns, and she wasn’t sure if they were real or conjured by her brain. Faces assembled themselves and disassembled in the swirl of the fog. Hands with long fingers came at her from out the corner of her eye, and she got heartedly sick of leaping out of the way.

  When the scream sounded through the haze for a moment she wondered if it came from her lips, but then she recognised it. Colin had the best scream in all of London. He should really have been on the stage.

  The cold grip of fear took hold of her stomach as it hadn’t since the Delancy academy and the whole adventure with the Psusennes. However, unlike being chased through the burning school by an undead pharaoh, this time Verity was the one in pursuit.

  Grabbing hold of the shocker stone under her coat, she ran towards where Colin was in position selling newspapers. In the distance other footsteps ran in his direction through the fog. They all appeared together as if they had popped out of nowhere.

  Emma with her curly dark chestnut hair barely contained under her bonnet. The twins, Jonathan and Jeremy for once together in a caper. Liam clutching his cap. Henry tall and lanky, with his own shocker stone in his hand was the oldest, but only by a fraction over her. The boy who she clashed with over leadership of the Seven, had been wanting to shock someone for a long time now. He’d mostly been that way since they returned from The Delancy School. Christopher, the most troublesome of the group, looked annoyed by the whole thing. He’d most likely been contemplating popping into a gin shop before the scream

  Henry found the pile of papers bundled up next to the lamppost. The faint orange light it cast at least meant they could see each other's faces.

  “Poor Colin,” Emma whispered, though they knew this was the plan all along.


  Seeing the abandoned newspapers like that, Verity’s stomach cramped with worry. “Don’t be silly,” she said, yanking the tracking display out of her coat pocket.

  The last thing that would help Colin was panic. Instead she stared at the little red circles on the tracker. The cluster of six was them here and drifting away to the north was another.

  “This way,” she said, spinning on her heel. “In a line, hand on shoulders so we don't lose each other.”

  “Shouldn’t we wait for Agent Thorne?” Emma asked.

  “Limited range,” she snapped in reply, “we could lose Colin if we do. Agent Thorne will have to catch up.”

  “I'll lead,” Henry said, muscling his way up to the front.

  Now normally Verity would have a stand-up argument with the lad then and there, but time was of the essence and Colin was only getting further away. Also, Henry had a pair of starlights he’d modified for the London Particular. As much as she wouldn’t admit it, he was better with optics than she was. So, she stood beside him, hand reluctantly resting on his shoulder, while Christopher did the same behind her.

  “Don’t go too fast,” she said in his ear. “You’ve got the longest legs of all of us remember?”

  Through the yellow smog, he still managed to shoot her a dirty look, but he didn’t set off at a run, but rather set a fast walking pace. While he looked ahead, Verity watched the display in her other hand and called out where to turn on which street. A few baffled people loomed out of the mist, men trying to find their way to the pub, a wagtail looking for a customer with a bright green hat on, and a shoestring peddler with his overflowing basket.

  All of these appeared and disappeared just as quickly in the dense fog, so that Verity almost wondered if she imagined them.

  They didn’t have to go very far though, which was good since telling Henry where to go was sooner or later going to develop into a fight, no matter who was in danger. Colin’s little red dot finished moving, and Verity slapped Henry on the shoulder to let him know that they’d reached their destination.

  He staggered back a couple of steps before glaring at her.

  “This one,” she said. “He’s in here.”

  It looked like any other slum dwelling. Two stories high, leaning against its neighbour with lines of laundry on the top floor slung across the road to the next, but there was nothing moving out front.

  They all lived in such areas before the Ministry provided a safe house in Kensington. The bustle of the slum was as familiar to them as their own heartbeat, and one thing was sure, there were always people about: mothers chasing children, dollymops chatting up customers, or drunk men slumped in the alleys. A rough and tumble existence, but definitely plenty of life.

  This house stood as silent as a full grave, and it sent chills up Verity’s spine. One glance in Henry’s direction, and she knew he noticed it too.

  “We have to get in there now,” he said, hefting the shocker stone in his hand. It was a solid bit of kit that she’d designed and came in very handy on Dartmoor when the Seven were faced with strong and dangerous men. They did pretty well in the East End too. Being children on the streets of London made gadgets the best way to protect themselves, yet what lay beyond that door was still unknown. Verity worried she hadn’t brought or made the right device for this occasion.

  Henry was right though, anything could be happening to Colin while they stood there. “Jonathan, Jeremy and Emma, go around the back and find a way in,” Verity instructed. The smaller children were like rats, they could find entrance into any building.

  They bounced off into the fog and disappeared.

  Now there was just the three older children. Christopher wore the kind of grin on his face that made Verity nervous, but since there wasn’t much else to do, but get their Colin back, she went to the door.

  From her satchel she fished out the auto-lock—a device of her own making. Plenty of lock-picks existed, but this was no bigger than the palm of her hand and worked quickly. For the last year or so she’d concentrated on miniaturising devices and making them as efficient as possible, since they were easy to conceal and even the smallest of their number could carry them. Ministry creations tended to be larger and harder to heft.

  She possessed confidence in her devices, but even so when the curved interior of the pick sucked onto the lock, and the clockwork inside began to do its work, she let out a controlled sigh of relief.

  The Sound—as her teacher at the academy, Professor Vidmar had called it—worked in her head. At first the ticking frightened her, but since the Delancy Academy, Verity made her peace with it. Now the Sound provided some order in the chaotic world around her and gave her the kind of insight into mechanications that most clankertons would have killed for.

  Even though her Uncle Octavius was out there, doing something, she had chosen to concentrate on those she loved and cared about at this moment. Thoughts of revenge were for now swept away by day to day existence… if she focused on them hard enough.

  The lock pick had the tempo in her brain of a mouse running in the walls, speedy, urgent, and somehow a little bit cute. That kind of device though on a simple slum house was a clue in itself. No one who lived here would ever have enough money to buy a lock like that, no matter how many shirts they washed, or shoe they put soles on.

  When the concave lock pick popped out into a convex form, it’s work was done. With a nod to Henry, Verity pushed the door open with the tip of her finger. Someone made sure the hinges were well oiled, and it swung open with barely a squeak.

  However, this was by no means an airtight door. King Fog already took up residence as the three young people stepped into the building. Curls of it obscured the floor, and caressed the walls, so any number of beasties could be hiding among it.

  “Did you see that?” Christopher whispered, even though they were alone. He nudged her in the direction of the stairs which led up. She saw what he meant, a flicker of blue light in amongst the fog.

  London was full of ghosts, Agent Thorne had told her; ones nursing ancient grievances, others hot with recent outrages. The Ministry dealt with those making mortal lives difficult on a semi-regular basis. It was something young and inexperienced agents were often tasked with, Thorne had said in a very offhand manner.

  Knowing of ghosts' existence though did not make them any more comfortable, especially in the swirling, dense fog which invaded this odd house. Like the street, it should have been full of slum dwellers, their noise and life fair to bursting out the walls—but there was nothing.

  “Let’s check these rooms,” she whispered. It wasn’t because of the chill up her spine, she’d after all faced the ghost of an ancient pharaoh not that long ago, but because it made sense not to leave an enemy at your back. Thorne taught her that too.

  Only two rooms came off the hallway on the ground floor. The three of them turned to the right one, and Henry pressed his ear against it for a moment. When he gave a nod, Verity pushed it open. It was dusty and full of upturned chairs, and a bed broken in the middle. It looked like a family had lived here once, she thought. Odd though that it was empty, since in this part of the Green everyone lived cheek by jowl. Apart from the cobwebs it didn’t look any different to any other room—only with no people.

  Christopher locked eyes with her and shook his head; he didn’t like the feel of the place either. Henry led the way into the other ground floor room, the mist swirling around their steps. This one didn’t even have furniture, only a largish pile of clothes in the corner by the door.

  She poked the pile a bit, just to see if it concealed anything, but it didn’t. One thing caught her attention though; the Ministry Seven could have fitted in everyone.

  Small clothes, she mouthed to Henry and Christopher, and their expressions hardened. Children’s clothes.

  Backing out of their hurriedly, they were about to head upstairs, when a hidden door under the stairs popped open. Henry leaned back to throw his shocker, but Verity grabbed hold of
his forearm before he could.

  It was Emma, her mop of brown curls backlit by flickering gaslight coming from inside. “This way,” she hissed. “We’ve found another doorway down here and there’s definitely something interesting behind it!”

  The mist twined around their ankles, as the three of the older children followed Emma. In this part of London, even a basement room would be rented out to a couple of families. No space was left vacant… except for this one apparently.

  Emma, Jonathan, and Jeremy must have levered open one of those narrow windows and slipped in. Most people didn’t lock them since they were so small—or at least people who weren’t familiar with London street urchins forgot.

  It was a typical basement, except it had gaslighting in each sconce, and a sodding great door that screamed its importance.

  The twins stood in front of it, already checking for protective traps or wires. Bound with iron and secure with a thick brass bar, it was sealed shut with a massive clockwork lock. Through the crack at the bottom of the door some purple coloured steam curled, promising even more excitement than the London Particular outside.

  Christopher looked up at it as if he had suddenly found the meaning of love. His dream, he’d once confessed to Verity was to crack the Bank of England’s vault, which probably in his dreams looked a lot like this one. Already he was flexing his finger joints and eyeing it up.

  The only problem was that Christopher never found a safe cracker willing to teach him, and even Henry wasn’t foolish enough to encourage him by giving him the basics. Much as Verity didn’t like to crush dreams, the second oldest boy didn’t really have the skills or the aptitude. Ask Christopher to find a particular gent in all of London, and he’d track him down in a jiffy. Engineering however wasn’t his thing.