The Rat-Catcher's Daughter: Lilywhite Boys, #0.5
By KJ Charles
4.5/5
()
Friendship
Love & Relationships
Damsel in Distress
Criminal Underworld
Secret Identity
Enemies to Lovers
Opposites Attract
Found Family
Love at First Sight
Class Differences
Unlikely Hero
Revenge Plot
About this ebook
Music-hall singer Miss Christiana is in serious debt, and serious trouble. She owes more than she can pay to a notorious criminal, and now he plans to make an example of her. There's no way out.
But Christiana has an admirer. Stan Kamarzyn has watched her sing for a year and he doesn't want to see her get hurt. Stan's nobody special--just a dodgy bloke from Bethnal Green--but he's got useful friends, the sort who can get a girl out of trouble, for a price. Christiana's not sure what it will cost her...
The two slowly reach an understanding. But Christiana is no criminal, and she can't risk getting mixed up with the law. What will happen when Stan's life as the fence for the notorious Lilywhite Boys brings trouble to his doorstep?
A trans f/m asexual romance novelette (17,000 words), set two years before Any Old Diamonds.
Content warnings: Story opens with misgendering/transphobia and threat of violence.
KJ Charles
KJ Charles writes romance, mostly m/m, mostly paranormal, fantastical, magical, historical, and wordy. She is the author of The Magpie Lord and a Rainbow Award-winner for A Case of Possession, Think of England and the Secret Casebook of Simon Feximal, all published by Samhain. She is an editor by trade, and lives in London.
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Reviews for The Rat-Catcher's Daughter
20 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The prequel to the Lilywhite Boys introduces most of the major characters for books 1 and 2 in the series. Very entertaining .
Book preview
The Rat-Catcher's Daughter - KJ Charles
With huge thanks to Helen Kord, May Peterson, and Lady Tiferet.
This story takes place two years before the events of Any Old Diamonds.
Content warning: the story opens with a scene of misgendering/transphobia and threat of violence
Chapter One
LONDON, 1893
Christiana looked in the mirror, and wondered if getting dressed up would make the forthcoming beating better or worse.
It was a toss-up. If she was painted and clad as herself, would the men coming for her be a little more restrained with their blows? Might they leave her face alone? Or would they be all the crueller for it?
The question thrummed urgently in her head, but it was merely a distraction, because nothing she did would matter now. She was going to get her head kicked in whatever clothes she wore, because Kammy Grizzard intended to make an example of her, and Kammy’s examples were notorious.
She wanted to be sick. Even more than that, she would have liked to run, but one of Kammy’s men was leaning on the outside of the door. Kammy was coming for a personal chat to express his disappointment, and any attempt to nack off would just get her an advance beating, an hors d’oeuvre before the main course. She’d have tried it anyway, but she was in a dressing room of the Britannia, a cramped Hoxton music hall, and there wasn’t a window.
It wasn’t like she had anywhere to go, or anyone who’d hide her. Not with Kammy out for blood.
Fuck it. She was looking at serious damage, because Kammy liked to be sure other people saw the examples he made. So she might as well look her best while she could, and it would be something to do while she waited.
She shaved close. Plucked her eyebrows and lined them. Painted and powdered—it was always a nuisance finding the right colours for her tawny skin when most powders were chalk-white—lined her eyes with kohl, stepped into a shimmering green satin gown and matching emerald pumps with a darling heel, made by a cobbler who specialised in women’s shoes for larger feet. She tucked her shortish black hair under the long black wig, and contemplated Miss Christiana in the mirror.
She wasn’t a classical beauty, perhaps, but she looked well enough. Big brown eyes, long dark lashes, a nice smile, not that she felt like smiling now. She was smart and saucy and near enough to everything she’d always wanted to be. It seemed horribly unfair that Kammy Grizzard would take that away.
She wondered whether to add the paste emeralds she would normally wear with this dress. It might be seen as provocative, under the circumstances.
Kammy Grizzard was a name to conjure with, but only in the Faustian sense. He’d started as a receiver of stolen goods and moved up to jewels. Now he also bought debts, because when you did that, you could buy people. Specifically, he had a line in women: actresses, singers, dancers, even a few society women, it was rumoured, and a handful of young men as well.
He wasn’t a procurer or pimp, not as such. What Kammy did was train his pretty faces, put them in the way of wealthy men or women, and expect them to come back with their pockets full. Cash, portable valuables, jewels. Kammy liked jewels as much as he liked obedience.
He sent you to seduce some wealthy person. You did the business with them for as long as it took, and helped yourself to whatever Kammy had told you to steal. If you got away, Kammy took the profit, which might be enough to pay your debt, or it might not. If you got caught, you hoped your mark would give you a thrashing rather than summon the police. If they didn’t, you kept your mouth shut and served your time, because nobody grassed up Kammy Grizzard. You didn’t grass him up, and you didn’t let him down.
Christiana had let him down. He’d be making an example. She really wanted to be sick.
She put on the string of glittering green paste. Took it off. Put it on again; took it off again, thoroughly disarranged the wig with fumbling fingers. She tried to straighten it and made it worse, snatched the thing off her head, and was standing there, gowned, painted, short-haired, and shaking, when the door opened and Kammy Grizzard walked in.
He didn’t look like what he was, which was the cold heart of a web of crime. He looked like a minor bank clerk, with grey-brown clipped hair, a pasty-white complexion that suggested he rarely saw sunshine, and gloomy eyes. The two brutes who flanked him, with thick muscles and the joy of cruelty in their eyes, looked exactly what they were. One of them had a gingery handlebar moustache that was an act of violence all by itself, and a mostly-healed cut on his forehead. Christiana had met him before.
Hello, Mr. Grizzard,
Christiana managed. Her voice was too high, and it cracked.
Christopher Morrow.
Kammy looked her up and down. His eyes shone with damp disappointment. "You let me down, Christopher. I had a plan. I told you what to do. I