Title: The Devious Dr. Jekyll
Author: Viola Carr
Release Date: October 27, 2015
Publisher: Harper Voyager
Genre: Paranormal/Fantasy/Steampunk
Format: Ebook/Paperback/Audible
Author: Viola Carr
Release Date: October 27, 2015
Publisher: Harper Voyager
Genre: Paranormal/Fantasy/Steampunk
Format: Ebook/Paperback/Audible
Dr. Eliza Jekyll, heroine of
the electrifying The Diabolical Miss Hyde—an edgy steampunk
retelling of the classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde—investigates a
bizarre murder case in an alternate Victorian London while battling her
treacherous secret half: Lizzie Hyde.
Solving the infamous Chopper
case has helped crime scene physician Dr. Eliza Jekyll establish her fledgling
career in the chauvinistic world of Victorian law enforcement. But the scrutiny
that comes with her newfound fame is unwelcome for a woman with a diabolical
secret. And there is the mercurial Royal Society agent and wolf man Remy
Lafayette. Does he want to marry her, eat her, or burn her at the stake? Though
Eliza is uncertain about Remy, her dark and jealous shadow self, Lizzie, wants
to steal the magnetic and persistent agent, and usurp Eliza’s life.
It’s impossible to push Remy
away when he tempts her with the one thing she can’t resist: a bizarre crime.
The search for a bloodthirsty ritual torturer dubbed the Pentacle Killer draws
them into a terrifying world of spies, art thieves, and evil alchemy, where the
price of immortality is madness—or damnation—and only Lizzie’s dark ingenuity
can help Eliza survive.
As Eliza and Remy race to
thwart a foul conspiracy involving the sorcerous French, they must also
overcome a sinister enemy who is all too close: the vengeful Lizzie, determined
to dispose of Eliza for good.
Author Information
Viola Carr was born in
Australia, but wandered into darkest London one foggy October evening and never
found her way out. She now devours countless history books and dictates
fantastical novels by gaslight, accompanied by classical music and the snoring
of her slumbering cat. She loves history, and pops down to London’s many
historical sites whenever she gets the chance. She likes steampunk, and
thought it would be cool to investigate wacky crimes with crazy gadgets…just so
long as her heroine was the creator of said wacky gadgets: a tinkerer, edgy,
with a dash of mad scientist. Readers can follow her on twitter at
@viola_carr and online at http://www.violacarr.com.
For More Information
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§ This giveaway begins October 26 and ends on November 13.
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§ Winner has 48 hours to reply.
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EXCERPT – CH 1:
A Stain of Breath
“Where’s the body?” Eliza Jekyll skidded to
a stop in a swish of gray skirts, clutching her doctor’s bag expectantly. The
framer’s shop was cluttered, oil paintings everywhere, rolled up or stretched
on wooden struts, ready to take gilded edging. Behind a curtain, stacks of
paint pots, tools, and sawn-up bits of wood hunkered out of sight. Old
chandeliers flickered, shedding bright golden light, and through the broad
windows glared a sullen, fog-bound yellow sun.
“Sorry to disappoint.” Inspector Harley
Griffin of the Metropolitan Police, her close friend and the only man on the
force who believed in her. Impeccably dressed as always, dark hair neatly
combed.
Dismayed, Eliza stared at the wooden array
he indicated. “But that’s an empty framing rack, not a corpse. Surely you
require no crime scene physician for that.”
Hippocrates, her clockwork pet, jigged on
hinged legs, his square brass head bobbing. “Human remains,” he chirped.
“Information please.”
“Chief Inspector Reeve insisted, I’m
afraid.” A heavy lick of irony on Griffin’s tone.
Eliza poked up her spectacles. “Thinks he’s
funny, does he? A dozen murders a night, the city crawling with bloodthirsty
anarchists, and he’s got the finest detective in London investigating a petty
theft.”
Griffin tugged his mustaches. “To be fair,
it’s faintly intriguing. The villain filched several artworks on Saturday
night—”
She snorted. “And now it’s Monday. The
scene contaminated. An even more irritating waste of my time.”
“—from under the noses of four security
guards,” continued Griffin, imperturbable. “Locks intact, no alarm raised.”
“Impressive. What does Reeve want me to do
about it? Test for incompetence?”
“Don’t get smart with me, missy.” Chief
Inspector Reeve waddled up, chewing on a cigar. His ugly brown suit looked
unkempt. “You’re late. Putting your face on?”
“My apologies, sir. Looking this pretty
takes such a long time.”
Her sarcasm hit Reeve’s glaring aura of chauvinist
pig and bounced off. “Quite right, too. Put some color in your cheeks. All
that unladylike science makes you peaky.”
Behind him, Griffin rolled his eyes. But
Eliza barely noticed, possessed of an all-too-familiar itch to claw Reeve’s
skin off. But it wasn’t her urge. It was Lizzie’s. The shadowy self inside her,
thrashing to break free
.
I’ll put YOUR face on, you sniggering
little prat, whispered Lizzie, her disembodied
voice threading craftily through Eliza’s blood like hot wire. Eliza’s skin
tightened. That restless throbbing in her veins augured trouble. This wasn’t
supposed to happen without her elixir.
Suddenly her plain, inoffensive dress
itched like fire ants. Her guts burned as if she’d swallowed poison, Lizzie’s
presence contorting her body into unnatural shapes, like an improperly fitted
corset . . .
“Eh?” She blinked, and the framer’s shop
sprang back into focus. “What did you say?”
Reeve puffed cigar smoke, rocking on his
heels. “I said, police work isn’t all murders and mayhem. You’re always
complaining no one but Griffin takes you seriously. Well, here’s a case. Want
it or not?”
Eliza swallowed a Lizzie-like urge to slam
Reeve’s nose back into his brain. She needed this job. When she and
Harley caught the gruesome killer labeled the Chopper, she’d imagined her
career would take off. But when Harley’s wife passed, newly promoted Chief
Inspector Reeve had sidelined him out of pretended sympathy whenever he could.
And medicine—especially crime scene medicine—was a man’s world.
Her work at Bethlem Asylum had dried up,
too. Understandably, given that the surgeon-in-charge who’d employed her was
dead, and the Chopper had turned out to be an asylum orderly—and one of her
closest friends. Not to mention the trifling matter of Razor Jack, a lunatic
killer whom she’d caught and put in Bethlem. He’d taken advantage of the mayhem
to escape.
In short, she needed all the work she could
get. Even petty larcenies, instead of cases that mattered. “I merely
remark that my expertise is hardly—”
“Burglary beneath your attention, is it?
Some louse-ridden scumbucket with his greasy fingers all over Her Majesty’s new
portrait, and you don’t care?”
“I see.” Eliza glanced at Griffin, who
raised apologetic eyebrows. That explained Reeve’s attendance: ingratiating
himself with the Palace. No one had seen the Mad Queen in public for years.
People whispered that she’d died of cholera, been starved by her wicked
advisers, or bewitched by sorcerous spies for the terrifying new French
Republic.
“The artist brought it in for framing. Not
the kind of thing a villain can sell, is it? Ergo, not a simple theft.” Reeve
stuck a thumb into scarlet braces. “Her Majesty could have a crazed admirer. It
could be Froggie agents, stirring up trouble! But you’ve better things to do,
have you?”
Aye, whispered
Lizzie. Come ’ere and I’ll show ’em to you.
“I didn’t mean . . .”
Reeve grinned. “Not so smart as you think
you are. Griffin, take off. You’re not needed here. Lads, make way for the good
lady doctor.”
Hit him.
Lizzie slithered into Eliza’s throat like a serpent, choking her. No one at
the Met gives a flying arsepoke about some “lady doctor” and her hysterical
fancies. Tell the woman-hating little bastard to go screw himself. Better
still: I’ll tell him to go screw himself. Just let me at him . . .
Eliza spluttered. “But this is Harley’s
case—”
“You heard the Chief Inspector,” cut in
Griffin loudly, “let Dr. Jekyll through.”
Hippocrates snuffled hopefully at the
floor, his little brass head shining. “Remains. Samples. Does not compute.”
Harley was better at swallowing his pride than
she. This had to be borne. “Never mind, Hipp. Let’s proceed. Take a recording,
please.” She pulled on a pair of white cotton gloves, trying to stay calm.
“Wooden frame on trestle legs, about seven feet by three. A set of pegs where
the canvas has been removed.”
Behind her, Reeve sniggered.
“Congratulations. Never would’ve figured that for myself.”
Eliza shot him a baleful glare. “You called
me, Chief Inspector. It wouldn’t be because your reputation rests on solving
this quickly, would it? Will you let me work, or shall I return to my
embroidery?”
“Embroidery,” chirped Hipp, muffled beneath
her skirts. “Irrelevant. Logic failure.”
Shall I return to my embroidery? mocked Lizzie. Shall I break your pox-ridden nose with my
forehead? Shall I grab your tiny balls and squeeze until your face turns black?
“Carry on, if you must,” muttered Reeve.
“I’ve witnesses to examine.” And he strutted away.
The urge to carry out Lizzie’s creative
revenge burned all too fresh and real.
Wouldn’t be the nicest pair of trousers
we’ve ever shoved our hand down, agreed Lizzie,
not that you’re any help in that department.
“Shut up,” hissed Eliza, fiddling with the
empty pegs. “I’m trying to work.”
Fine. You work away. I’ll just sit over
here and think of creative ways to rip his nuts off.
“If it makes you happy.” Eliza grinned
around clenched teeth. “Just leave me alone. You’re embarrassing me!”
Don’t get your petticoats in a twist, grumbled Lizzie. I’m helping, ain’t I? Just you wait.
“Doctor, are you quite well?” Griffin eyed
her strangely. He didn’t know about Lizzie, not exactly. But he was a good
detective, smart and observant. One day, he’d figure it out.
Eliza flushed. Talking to herself again.
Her skin felt stretched too thin, like overstressed rubber. “Of course. It’s
nothing. Right, is he gone? Tell me what we’ve got.”
Griffin nodded towards a fat man who slunk
anxiously in a corner. “The owner claims he left a pile of rolled-up canvases
in that corner, ready to be framed and varnished. Twenty-odd works missing.
Commissions from five or six artists, but naturally we care only for the
Queen’s. Painted by . . .” Griffin consulted his neatly written notebook. “Some
court artist named Wyn Patten.”
“Never heard of him. Any forced entry?”
“No visible damage. And no keys missing. Could
be an inside job, of course. These things often are.”
Not if they can’t fence it, put in Lizzie stoutly. What’d be the point o’ that? See, I can be
clever, too, you uppity tart.
Eliza forced a polite smile. “But
wouldn’t that imply the stolen goods are worth something?”
Griffin nodded. “Reeve’s right about that,
at least. All just portraits and landscapes, according to the framer, but given
that he’s by appointment to the Palace, he caters to high-profile artists. Too
easily identifiable as stolen. What use filching art you can’t sell?”
“Hmm. Any witnesses, or is Reeve just
making it look as if he’s investigating?”
“All the staff had gone home on Saturday
night, with Sunday off. Just rented watchmen, law-abiding citizens one and all.
Nothing unusual occurred, no one left his post, no one saw a thing.”
Eliza adjusted her optical’s leather
straps. She’d built it herself, modified from her late father’s designs. The
array of lenses and spectrics detected all manner of substances, from
stupefying drugs and poisons to bloodstains and more ethereal traces. Such
things could get you dragged from your bed in the dead of night, to answer
uncivil questions in the Royal’s electrified dungeons at the Tower.
But none of Henry Jekyll’s dabblings had
been things one chatted about at tea parties. As a girl, she’d been fascinated
by his dusty laboratory, bold young men in shirtsleeves and their illicit
experiments, tinkering with light and air and the substance of life itself.
Sparking copper coils in vacuum-sealed flasks, dripping galvanic batteries
wired to twitching specimens in jars of preserving fluid. Equations on the
blackboard, arcane formulae, the forbidden mathematics of magnetism and energy
chalked next to Latin abbreviations and lists of intricate symbols. Not to
mention outlawed alchemical elixirs and the search for eternity.
She slotted a heavy magnifying lens over
her spectacles. “Nothing’s damaged, no oil fragments in the pegs. This art was
not snatched. Our man took his time, confident he’d remain undisturbed. And . .
. hold on, there’s a handprint on the adjoining wallpaper.”
Griffin coughed. “Pity this isn’t the Paris
Sûreté,” he whispered. “I hear they’re collecting copies of convicted
felons’ handprints for comparison.”
“Alongside their severed heads? Away with
your treasonous Republican sympathies, Inspector.” She peered at the faint
smudge. “Coal dust, or iron. Smallish hands, perhaps a youngster. And . . . I
say.” She glanced left and right, and swiftly flipped in a new multi-colored
lens. “How extraordinary—”
“You’re extraordinary.” The whisper
sparkled in her ear.
Startled, she teetered backwards. Strong
hands steadied her, into a familiar gunflash scent of steel and thunder.
Hippocrates jittered, dancing a clumsy jig.
Inwardly, Eliza groaned. Oh, bother.
I lied, whispered
Lizzie with a grin. I ain’t leaving this one alone.
Quite a twist on the genre!
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