whatever her most recent reckless stunt had been. Ada always managed to avoid the hot seat, which Corinne thought was unfair, considering she wouldnât get into nearly as much trouble if she didnât know Ada would be there to bail her out of it. She fidgeted in the chair that was facing Johnnyâs desk while he shoved some paperwork into one of the overflowing file cabinets. There hadnât been time to change out of her dress, which was ripped at the back seam and still smelled of Harryâs grime. She knew the black kohl lining her eyelids was smudged, and the cupidâs bow of her mouth had faded. It didnât really matter in here, though. Johnny had seen her looking much worse.
âIâm not your headmaster,â he said at last, dropping heavily into his chair. âFrankly, I donât feel like giving a lecture on how vital it is to keep our customers happy, and how important it is to not, say, purposely send them into a panic.â
âThatâs good, then,â Corinne said. âBecause it doesnât sound like a lecture Iâd pay much attention to anyway.â
Johnnyâs expression betrayed some amusement at the quip, but mostly he just looked tired.
âThe Cast Iron is losing money,â he said. âWe canât last on two or three shows a month, especially if theyâre cut short like tonight. I have no idea how Carson is keeping the Red Cat open.â
Corinne fingered the shabby arm of her chair, picking at the flaking leather.
âI was trying to give the songsmiths more time,â she said. âI wouldnât have done it otherwise.â
âI know.â
She met his eyes, trying to read his face in the dim light. She could count on one hand the people in her life she was scared of disappointing, and Johnny Dervish was first and foremost. Johnny sighed and picked up his pocketknife. Absently he chiseled into the wood of his desk with the tip.
âThat mark youâve been trailingâthe jeweler,â he said. âYou said he drops off money for his mistress on the second Friday of every month? Thatâs tomorrow.â
Corinne hesitated.
âYou want us to pull a job tomorrow? Adaâs picture will be all over the police stations by morning.â
Johnny gouged into the wood a little deeper. With the shadows darkening the circles under his eyes, he seemed more exhausted than Corinne had ever seen him. He had inherited the Cast Iron decades ago, when he was only a few years older than Corinne was now. She couldnât imagine what it was like to watch his lifeâs work crumble from the peak of its glory. The Cast Iron had been her home for only four years, and the mere thought of its closing felt a little like dying.
âIf I canât afford to pay the bills and bribe the right people, thenthe Cast Iron will go dark,â Johnny said. He looked up from the desk and met her eyes, unblinking. Corinne knew what he wasnât saying. If the Cast Iron closed, there was nowhere for her and Ada and Saint to go. Boston was an unforgiving city, ribboned in iron and steel. There were thousands of hemopaths in Boston, but jobs for their kind were scarce. Corinne had known desperate hemopaths to swear fealty to Johnny like serfs of the Middle Ages. Unlike his predecessor, Johnny ran the club like a business instead of a social fraternity. Those who did the work earned a cut of the profits. Some of the jobs were less legal than others, but in times like these the line was blurred at best.
Others might be able to find work with Luke Carson at the Red Cat or the Witcher brothers at Down Street, but Ada and Corinne had been a part of Johnnyâs inner circle for years. Carson and the Witchers would never trust them. Loyalty to one of the iron-free clubs was loyalty for life. And Corinne couldnât return to the life sheâd had before.
âWe can do it,â she said. âWe know the patrol routes.â
Johnny