Chapter 17 #3
“Where do you wish to go, milady?” Dragon asked, after he let down the step of the carriage.
“O’Cairre Print Works, on Farringdon Street.”
He gave her a sharp glance. “In Clerkenwell?”
“Yes. It’s in the Farringdon Works building, behind the—”
“There are three prisons in Clerkenwell.”
“There are also flower-sellers, candle-makers, and other respectable businesses. The area is being reclaimed.”
“By thieves and Irishmen,” Dragon said darkly as Pandora ascended into the carriage. He handed in the leather valise stuffed with papers, sketches, and game prototypes, and she set it on the seat beside her. After closing the carriage door, he went to sit up top with the driver.
Pandora had pored over a list of printers before narrowing down her choices to the final three.
O’Cairre Print Works was of special interest because the proprietor happened to be a widow who had run the business since her husband’s death.
Pandora liked the idea of supporting other women in business.
Clerkenwell was hardly the most dangerous place in London, although its reputation had been tarnished by a prison bombing nine years ago.
The Fenians, a secret society fighting for the cause of Irish self-government, had unsuccessfully tried to free one of their members by blowing a hole in a prison wall, resulting in the deaths of twelve people and injuries to scores of others.
It had resulted in a public backlash and resentment against the Irish that had been slow to fade.
Which was a shame, in Pandora’s opinion, since the hundred thousand peaceful Irish-born residents of London shouldn’t be punished for the actions of a few .
Once a respectable middle-class area that had fallen to hard times, Clerkenwell bristled with tall, densely crowded buildings sandwiched between tumbledown properties.
New road construction would someday ease the warren of congested alleys, but for now the ongoing work had created a series of detours that made parts of Farringdon Street difficult to access.
Fleet Ditch, a river that had devolved into a sewer, had been covered by the roadway, but its ominous slushing could occasionally be heard—and unfortunately smelled—through grids in the pavement.
The rumbles and whistling of trains cut through the air as they approached the temporary terminus of the Farringdon Street station and a large goods depot that had been built by the railway company.
The carriage stopped in front of a utilitarian red-and-yellow brick warehouse building.
Pandora’s heart skipped with excitement as she saw the double-fronted shop faced with segmented windows and a carved pediment over the entrance.
O’Cairre Print Works had been painted on the pediment in elaborate gold lettering.
Dragon was quick to open the carriage door and reach in for Pandora’s valise before pulling down the step.
He was careful not to let Pandora’s skirt touch the wheel as she emerged from the carriage.
Efficiently he opened the shop door, and closed it after she entered.
However, instead of waiting outside the shop as a footman would, he went inside and stood beside the door.
“You don’t need to wait in the shop with me, Dragon,” Pandora murmured as he gave her the valise. “My appointment will last at least an hour. You can go somewhere and drink some ale, or something.”
He ignored the suggestion and remained exactly where he was.
“I’m visiting a printer,” Pandora couldn’t resist pointing out. “The worst thing that could happen to me is a paper cut.”
No response.
Sighing, Pandora turned and went to the first in a row of counters that extended across the large interior and divided it into several departments.
The print works was the most wonderfully cluttery, colorful place she had ever been in, except perhaps Winterborne’s department store, which was an Aladdin’s cave of sparkling glass and jewels and luxury items. But this was a fascinating new world.
The walls were liberally papered with caricature prints, cards, playbills, engravings, penny-sheets, and toy theater backdrops.
The air was perfumed with an intoxicating mixture of fresh paper, ink, glue, and chemicals, a smell that made Pandora want to snatch up a pen and frantically start drawing something.
At the back of the shop, machinery clacked and clattered with a start-run-stop rhythm as apprentices operated hand presses.
Overhead, prints had been hung up to dry on hundreds of lines strung across the room.
There were towers of mill-board and card stock everywhere, and high columns of paper in greater quantities and varieties than Pandora had ever seen in one place.
The counters were piled with trays of printing blocks carved with letters, animals, birds, people, stars, moons, Christmas symbols, vehicles, flowers, and thousands of other delightful images.
She loved this place.
A young matron approached. She was tidy and slender and bosomy, with curly brown hair and long-lashed hazel eyes. “Lady St. Vincent?” she asked, and curtseyed deeply. “Mrs. O’Cairre.”
“A pleasure,” Pandora said, beaming .
“I’ve never been so intrigued as I was by your letter,” Mrs. O’Cairre said.
“Your board game sounds very clever, milady.” She was a well-spoken woman with the musical hint of a brogue.
There was a lively air about her that Pandora liked exceedingly.
“Would you like to sit with me and discuss your plans for it?”
They went to sit at a table in a sheltered spot at the side of the room.
For the next hour, they talked about Pandora’s game and what components it would require, while she unearthed sketches, notes, and prototypes from her valise.
It was a shopping-themed game, with pieces that moved around a track that wove through the departments of a whimsically detailed store.
It would include merchandise cards, play money, and chance cards that would either help or hinder the players’ progress.
Mrs. O’Cairre was enthusiastic about the project, making suggestions about various materials to use for the game components.
“The most important issue is the folding game board. We can do lithograph printing directly onto the board with a flat-bed press. If you want a multi-colored game board, we could create a metal plate for each color—five to ten would be sufficient—and apply ink to the board in layers until the image is complete.” Mrs. O’Cairre viewed Pandora’s hand-painted game board thoughtfully.
“It would be much cheaper if we only applied the image in black and white, and you hired women to hand-color the image. But of course, that would be much slower. If your board game is in high demand, which it will be, I’m sure, you’ll make greater profits by producing the game entirely by machine. ”
“I would prefer the hand-colored option,” Pandora said. “I want to provide good jobs for women who are trying to support themselves and their families. There’s more than profits to consider.”
Mrs. O’Cairre stared at her for a long moment, her eyes warm. “I admire that, milady. Very much. Most ladies of your rank, if they think of the poor at all, do little more than knit stockings and caps for charity groups. Your business would help the poor far more than knit-work.”
“I hope so,” Pandora said. “Believe me, my knitting wouldn’t help anyone.”
The woman laughed. “I do like you, milady.” She stood and rubbed her hands together briskly. “Come to the back rooms, if you please, and I’ll give you a pile of samples to take home and view at your leisure.”
Scooping up her papers and game materials, Pandora dumped them into her valise.
She glanced over her shoulder at Dragon, who was watching her from beside the door.
He stepped forward as he saw that she was heading to the back of the shop, but she shook her head and gestured for him to stay there.
Frowning slightly, he folded his arms and remained in place.
Pandora followed Mrs. O’Cairre past a waist-high counter where a pair of boys were busy collating pages.
To the left, an apprentice worked a treadle-operated letter press with huge gears and levers, while another man operated a machine with large copper rollers that pressed images continuously on long rolls of paper.
Mrs. O’Cairre led her to a sample room brimming with materials.
Moving along a wall of shelves and drawers, Mrs. O’Cairre began to collect pieces of paper, card stocks, boards, binding canvas and muslins, and a variety of type-specimen lettering sheets.
Pandora followed closely behind her, receiving handfuls of pages and dropping them into her valise .
They both paused at a discreet knock.
“It’s likely the warehouse boy,” Mrs. O’Cairre said, heading to the other side of the room.
While Pandora continued to browse among the shelves, the printer opened the door just enough to reveal a boy in his teens, with a cap pulled low over his forehead.
After a brief, muttered exchange, Mrs. O’Cairre closed the door.
“Milady,” she said, “I beg your pardon, but I have to give instructions to a deliveryman. Will it trouble you if I leave you here for one minute?”
“Certainly not,” Pandora said. “I’m as happy as a clam at high water.” She paused to look more closely at the woman, who was still smiling... but distress had exerted subtle tension over her features like a drawstring bag being cinched. “Is something wrong?” Pandora asked in concern.
The woman’s face cleared instantly. “No, milady, it’s only that I don’t like to be interrupted when I’m with a customer.”
“Don’t worry on my account.”
Mrs. O’Cairre went to a set of drawers and pulled out an open-ended envelope. “I’ll be back sooner than you can take a hop, skip, and a jump.”