Alice C. Lynch. Alice Olson Lynch. Alice…
Ah, there she was.
His pupil flared as the picture slid into view on his phone’s screen. Alice’s facebook profile gradually scrolled under the touch of his thumb, revealing her photographs, friends, interests. All the little things that made humans human, now conveniently reduced into a high accessible webpage.
In the dark of his rundown flat, the smartphone’s dim blue glow provided the only light in the room, illuminating the edges of his face. He was reclined on the remains of an old leather chaise, inhaling the smell of must and raw wood while mice scampered and scratched inside the walls. Outside he could hear the sounds of daily life, of cars rumbling past and clipped small talk between strangers at the street cart stand at the end of the block.
She wasn’t half bad. A mousey thing in outdated fashions, charmingly Victorian, though with a little more flair than anyone dared show in those days. A woman showing her corset was liable to be charged with indecent exposure, but recent retro fashions did expand creative on the idea. She seemed fixated on it.
So this was there Alasdair’s bloodline had ended up. Locally and within grabbing distance, anyway. Fitting. Yves would have loved her. Pathetic sod.
Irrelevant, it wasn’t her he was interested in. Only her heritage and her name.
He shut off his phone and laid his head back in the dark, afforded to him by the boarded windows and patched holes in the wall. Naught left to do in the moment but wait. Come nightfall, he would finally get somewhere after all this effort.
“Wait!”
A tall silhouette moved beneath the haloes of yellow streetlamps, jogging from around the corner. He was reflected in the puddles in the cracks of the sidewalk, collected from the afternoon rain—which was likely to reprise itself, given the weight of the air and the murky cloudcover overhead.
The tailor’s shop was a quaint little shop nestled between others of its kind along a classical street, the sort lined with rustic old buildings with gothic windows, black, steepled roofs, and discolored brick facades. One of the last bastions for a dwindling trade in this era of mass production.
Sasha Dmitriyev appreciated it. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d been to see a proper tailor.
But now she was closing up shop, stopping just to lock the outer door. Alice Lynch, matching her profile picture. Alice Lynch, in fashions as retrograde as her profession. Alice Lynch, the key to Alasdair’s resurrection.
Sasha drew within speaking distance, a young man not too young in a long brown coat. He donned buttoned shirt beneath, cinched with a belt that was tied in lieu of a modern buckle. A look seldom seen these days.
Something long and black draped over one arm.
“You’re closed? Already?” Sasha gasped as he drew near. He glanched at his watch, flicking back his cuff. It was half past nine. Of course the shop was closed. Most of these humble little shops weren’t even open past six. “Look, I need this coat repaired by tomorrow. It will only take a minute.”
He held his arm, displaying an old tailcoat. Frayed threads from a dramatic tear along the inner seam were evident. Sasha wondered if perhaps he wasn’t laying it on a little too thick to garner Alice’s interest. No, he thought. Everyone is too desperate for attention to be wary these days.
“Can you help? Please?”