Home > Before the Devil Breaks You (The Diviners #3)(10)

Before the Devil Breaks You (The Diviners #3)(10)
Author: Libba Bray

“Sorry I’m late,” Mabel said, bustling inside the tiny vestibule, shedding her coat, hat, and gloves as she did.

Arthur winked. “Don’t worry. You’ve only missed a lot of hot air. Wait right here. I’ll introduce you.”

Mabel peeked around the corner. Cigarette smoke filled the cramped, nearly barren garret. It wasn’t much: Two dormer windows faced the streets. The low roof leaked into a bucket set up in a tiny kitchenette, which housed a bathtub. There was a water closet, a steamer trunk that doubled as seating, an easel in a corner, and, off to one side, an unmade bed peeking out behind a sheet rigged to a clothesline. The sight of the bed, messy and intimate, brought a blush to Mabel’s cheeks. Sketches had been cellophaned to the walls. They were very good: still lifes and street scenes and some figure drawings of nude women, which only intensified the heat in Mabel’s face. If they were Arthur’s, he had real talent.

Two men and a woman sat at a chipped table, arguing. “Marlowe doesn’t care about his workers. He just wants his exhibition to go up on time,” a heavyset young man with a mustache and goatee was saying. His cheeks were a mottled pink, and his thick, round glasses made his blue eyes seem enormous. “The workers want to strike!”

“But they’ve signed yellow-dog contracts,” the other fella said in a soft, Spanish-accented voice. A Lenin-style cap topped his shaggy dark hair.

“Yellow-dog contracts are criminal! You sign away all your rights,” the young woman said. She wore a beret over her thick reddish-brown hair. Her face was delicate and pretty, and as much as Mabel wanted to be above jealousy, she felt its sharp sting anyway.

“Hey!” Arthur said sharply, and the small room quieted. He gestured toward the doorway. “Everyone, I’d like to introduce you to our newest member. Miss Mabel Rose.”

Mabel gave a small wave. Her cheeks went hot. “Hello,” she said, her voice cracking on the word.

The others eyed her suspiciously, except for the girl, who leaned back, appraising Mabel. “Virginia Rose’s daughter?”

“Yes,” Mabel said, irritated. She didn’t want to be known as her mother’s daughter here. She wanted to be enough on her own. “And it’s Mabel. Just Mabel.”

The larger boy with the glasses folded his arms across his chest. “You should have talked to us first, Arthur. We make decisions together. We are not an oligarchy.”

“Sorry, Aron. But Mabel is a real asset. We could use her.” Everyone was silent. “Come on. Where are your manners?”

“Manners are bourgeois,” the pink-cheeked boy said.

“Enough, Aron,” the dark-eyed boy in the cap said. He bowed his head. “Luis Miguel Hernandez. Pleased to meet you, Mabel.”

“Gloria Cowan,” the girl said, shaking Mabel’s hand.

The pink-cheeked boy only nodded. “Aron Minsky.”

Arthur offered Mabel a ratty chair. It was one of only two. Gloria sat in the other while Aron and Luis occupied the steamer trunk. “It’s not much. But as you can see, I’m not living in the Waldorf.”

“I’ve never even seen the Waldorf,” Mabel said, smiling back at Arthur.

“I’ll bet your grandmother has,” Gloria said coolly. “After all, she’s old New York money.”

“So, you’re the infamous Secret Six? The ‘anarchist agitators’ the police are looking for,” Mabel said, changing the subject quickly. She didn’t want to talk about that side of her family. “But there are only four of you.”

“There was trouble at a rally in October. One of us was deported, the other arrested,” Luis explained.

“We were lucky they didn’t catch all of us,” Gloria said.

Mabel had a vague memory of her parents telling her about some explosions at a Sacco and Vanzetti rally that had been blamed on anarchists. They seemed to think Arthur had been involved, which didn’t make them happy.

“The newspapers sure don’t like you,” Mabel said.

“Ach! The newspapers are the tool of the capitalist oppressors,” Aron said, stabbing the air with his fist. “You cannot find real news there. Take this business with Jake Marlowe, for instance.”

“What business?” Mabel asked.

“The strike at his mine out in New Jersey,” Luis said.

Arthur perched on the edge of the bathtub close to Mabel. “Three days ago, Jake Marlowe’s miners went on strike to protest conditions at his uranium mine,” he explained. “They’ve been putting in very long hours. And many of them are sick from the work. When they complained and talked union, management fired them, turned them out of company housing, and hired scabs. Now the miners and their families are living in a tent city in a field across from the mine. They’re cold and hungry and scared.”

“The press only wants to talk about Marlowe’s Future of America Exhibition going up in April. To them, it’s the biggest thrill to hit New York in ages. It’s going to make a lot of money, too. Why write about poor, striking workers when you can write about the capitalist circus coming to town?” Luis added.

“Because these industrialists own the newspapers! You think a man like Hearst cares about workers? He wants to keep the unions far from his own business,” Aron sniped.

“I could get my father to write about it,” Mabel offered.

“No offense, Mabel,” Arthur said, “but anybody reading The Proletariat already sympathizes with the workers. We need to get Mom and Pop in their comfortable living rooms to care about these people, to see them as fellow human beings, not rabble-rousers the way they’ve been painted by powerful people with money to lose.”

“What’s this?” Gloria asked. She’d pulled the drawing from Mabel’s bag and was examining it closely. “It’s terrifying.”

“It was given to me by a woman on Carmine Street. She wrote to me that some men had taken her sister away from the garment factory where she worked. This was months ago, and she’s still missing. The girl had some clairvoyant abilities. A Diviner, I guess you’d call her.”

Aron scoffed. “If anything embodies the dangers of capitalism, it’s those so-called Diviners, claiming to have powers that elevate them above the rest of us. And now they’re making money from it and spending their nights in hotel parties being photographed by reporters on the payroll—like that Sweetheart Seer.”

Mabel knew she should stick up for Evie, but she had just met these people. Besides, she was irritated with Evie. “They’re not all like that,” she said with a shrug.

“If this woman was a Diviner, why couldn’t she see the men coming to take her away?” Luis asked.

Gloria was looking at Mabel as if she were on the witness stand and failing. “Why did this woman come to you for help?”

“She said her sister had seen in a vision that I should help her.”

Gloria stared for a minute. And then she laughed. “You fell for that line? Oh, Arthur. Honestly. You found us a real Girl Scout.”

Mabel’s face went hot again. She wished she could unsay everything.

Arthur’s eyes flashed. “Gloria. Try not to be a barracuda, will you?”

“Probably she wanted money. She tells you that there’s something threatening you, and then she offers to take away the curse if you pay her. It’s an old trick,” Luis said sympathetically.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)