I'd been wrong about the peddler. She did show up at a little after ten o'clock that morning, except...
"That's not her," Celia said, staring at the woman standing on our doorstep.
"Who am I then?" the woman asked, thrusting out one hip. She was dressed in a gown that could once have been deep red but had faded to a dull rust-brown. The shawl draped over her shoulders looked more like a rag than a garment and the bonnet sitting lopsided on her head had frayed at the edges and lost all of its ribbons, if it ever had any.
She pulled back the cover on her basket to reveal her goods but did not take any out. Usually she began her sales spiel before the door had fully opened but this time she seemed to sense our disinterest in her wares from the start.
"She's the previous peddler," Celia explained. "The one before the one who sold me the amulet." She glanced up and down the street. "Are you alone?"
"Alone as any soul can be in this Godforsaken city." The woman smiled, revealing a top layer of teeth worn almost to the gums.
Celia recoiled. "Yes, quite."
I shifted my sister aside gently and smiled at the peddler. "Who worked your area last week?"
The woman shrugged. Her shawl fell off her shoulder and she didn't bother to pull it back up. "No one."
"Somebody must have," Celia said. "You are not the woman I bought an amulet from on Thursday."
"You like pretty jewelry?" The woman sifted through the pieces of cutlery, trinkets, and rags-some clean-and other odds and ends in her basket.
"I don't want to buy any jewelry," Celia said tartly. "I want to know who took over this area last week."
The woman held out a thin bracelet covered in grime. It was as black as my hair. When Celia didn't move to take it, the peddler shook it, all the while smiling that gummy smile.
"How much?" I asked her.
"Three shillings."
"Three!" Celia clicked her tongue. "What's it made of?"
The woman rubbed it with her shawl. "Could be silver."
"I highly doubt it."
"Wait here." I went inside and retrieved my reticule. I dug out three shillings and placed them palm up in my hand. The peddler reached for them but I closed my fist. "Information first."
"Yes," Celia chimed in, giving me a nod of approval. "Tell us who worked your area last week."
The woman tapped her nose with her finger then pointed it at me. "Smart girl. But I can't tell you who done my area last week 'cause no one did." She held her finger up to stop Celia's protest. "Wait, wait, I didn't say nuffink about this street, did I?"