Harriet took a few steps to bring her to Crowther’s side.
“You don’t need that stick at all, do you, Crowther?”
He watched Wicksteed’s retreating figure.
“I needed it yesterday. Today I am just enjoying its company.”
He offered his arm and they turned back toward the front of the house.
“He wants to be a gentleman,” Harriet commented.
“Wicksteed? Horsewhipping women hardly seems the way to go about it.”
She smiled. “No, I’ve had no chance to tell you as yet. I visited yesterday and had a look through his desk.”
“I take it you didn’t find the notebooks detailing all his crimes?”
She wrinkled her nose. “No, one of his desk drawers is locked. I did find drafts of a rather unctuous letter to the College of Arms, though. And we have just seen that he is capable of violence against a woman.”
Crowther murmured, “There are times when we are all capable of that.”
Harriet chose to ignore him and continue her own train of thought. “I am sure that he has some hold over Hugh.”
“You think he sent the bottle to Cartwright by Hugh’s hand, too?” Crowther gave a slightly exasperated sigh.
And when she nodded, “Why, though, Mrs. Westerman? There is no sense in it. If he has this hold over Mr. Thornleigh, then his wishing to remove the threat of Alexander’s return, or that of his heirs, has some logic to it. But if that is his wish, then he would surely not want Hugh to be hanged for his crimes. And why would he want the man to have the freedom to shoot himself? There can be no other interpretation of the scene we have just witnessed. He was angry that his benefactor could not shoot himself while drunk because of the actions of that little maid. That hardly suggests his fortunes depend on Hugh.”
Mrs. Westerman did not look dismayed.
“Perhaps his allegiances are elsewhere now, Crowther. If both Hugh and Alexander are removed, then the control of the family wealth falls to Lady Thornleigh. He may think her a better patron.”
The remark made Crowther stop, then with a shrug he moved on.
“There is no proof,” he said. “Nothing. Speculation and gossip and a bottle of poison is all we have, and they point clearly at Hugh.”
“Isn’t the proper scientific method to suggest a hypothesis and then look for the evidence to support it?”
“No, it certainly is not. It is to observe, gather all the information one can, then hypothesize with a great deal of circumspection and care.”
Harriet shrugged. “I like my method better.”
Crowther did not reply, only gave a speaking sigh as they approached the entrance to the house.
They were not the first visitors of the morning. As they waited under the heavy ornament of the hallway, they saw Squire Bridges pause on the stairway, taking, it seemed, a very friendly farewell from Lady Thornleigh. He bent low over her hand, his eyes looking up into her lovely face with great warmth. She was smiling at him, with her head a little to one side, and with some last word turned from him and made her way out of sight toward the state rooms above. The squire began to descend the stair, then caught sight of them, and his step faltered a little. The lines on his forehead deepened.
“Crowther. Mrs. Westerman. You are making an early call.”
Crowther smiled. “Not as early as yourself, sir.”
Bridges drew himself up. “I have business here at the moment, as I am sure you can imagine. Though I do not understand what might be your matter here.”
They regarded each other steadily for a while. Crowther began to wonder how long the match might last when a maid appeared at their side.
“Lady Thornleigh’s apologies, but she is unable to receive guests today. She is feeling a little unwell.”
The squire’s face took on an air of great contentment. Crowther turned to him with one eyebrow raised.
“I do hope your visit did not render her bilious, sir.”
He reddened, and was on the point of reply when Hugh, pale and un-shaved, entered from one of the lower corridors.
“Mrs. Westerman! Crowther! Come in. I will see you, even if my respected stepmother will not.”
The squire did not look at him, but turned away. As they followed Hugh through the archway into the old meeting hall, Crowther glanced at Harriet’s face.
“The squire was once a great friend to us, Crowther,” she whispered.
“He is a politician.”
“And seems to have joined the party of Lady Thornleigh. I thought they hated each other.”
“He must believe he has evidence that is sure to hang Hugh, and is hoping to make friends with the new power in the house.”
Hugh looked back at them over his shoulder. “What are you whispering about?”
They were entering the old hall of the house. It had been built some two hundred years before the rest. The modern property had been conjured around it, an elegant frontage on the ancient heart of the place. It was still stone-flagged, the furniture massive and dark. The walls were hung with old arms and portraits so stained with age one could hardly make out the stiff profiles of the first earls of Sussex that brooded high above them. At the far end of the Hall two halberds bearing the arms of the family on rotting silk were crossed on the wall. The huge empty fireplace could have roasted a whole ox. Probably had, Harriet thought, as the first earls drank with their dogs and servants and dragged in parcels of game across the flagstones from their hunt, the stag’s head loose and sightless, slipping and bouncing over the stone, while the dogs leaped and yapped at it.
Hugh approached the wide oak table in the center of the room. Harriet moved toward him, her dress whispering on the stone floor as she moved.
“We did not know the squire and Lady Thornleigh were on such good terms.”
Hugh reached for the wine bottle on the great table a little uncertainly.
“They are negotiating over my blood.” His fingers closed around the thin green neck, he lifted it and began to slop the claret into one of the large glasses. It splashed a little over the rim.
“Bridges is in hock to us. It never worried me-I’m told he pays the interest in a regular fashion. A political loan of my father’s, I think. I dare say my beautiful mama has been promising it will cause him no trouble if I am hanged and control comes to her, but if he looks too hard in other directions, then he will not find Thornleigh a friendly broker when I am gone. Or dead by my own hand. She will make him suffer-whatever she says to him now.”
The evenness of his tone horrified Harriet.
“Hugh, please! What is happening in this house?”
Thornleigh put down the wine glass, but kept his head turned away. Harriet walked quickly toward him, brushing off as she did the warning hand Crowther had placed on her sleeve.
“Did you murder that man, Carter Brook, kill Nurse Bridges, poison Joshua? I cannot believe it. Will you not save yourself? Mr. Thornleigh, your brother. .”
Hugh spun round and grabbed her by the wrist. His wine glass toppled from the table and smashed on the old stone flags below them. The shattered crystal seemed to chime in the air.
“What do you know of Alexander, Harriet?” He pulled her toward him. His living eye danced over her face. “Is he alive? Have you found him?”
She stared at him, caught between fear and pity. The pink and yellow scarring across his cheek and eye looked like a mockery of hope. She felt Crowther move a little closer toward them. She could see tears forming in Hugh’s eyes. So the damaged one could still grieve, even when it saw nothing. She gently pulled her wrist free of him and stepped back a little way. She could feel bruises beginning to bloom under her cuffs like sprays of foxglove opening darkly under her skin. She shook her head, spoke softly, hesitating.
“He is dead, we think. Murdered some days ago in London. It was reported in the Advertiser. Alexander Adams-we think that is the name he was using in town.”
Hugh turned away with a roar of laughter
.
“Done! Done! Dead and done.” Harriet stepped further back. “Then it is over. They have bound me and whipped me. All over! To think what I would have given to hear that name a week ago, what I was prepared to give to Brook-and now you give it to me during a morning call, and it is nothing. Useless! A thousand times worse than useless.”
He rested his head above the cold maw of the great fireplace, and struck his open palm against the old stone. Harriet waited till the echo had retreated back into the impassive walls. When Hugh dropped his arm to his side again, she could see the place where he had brought down his hand spotted in red.
“Who, Mr. Thornleigh? Who has done this? Are you in Wicksteed’s power? We must get your neck out of this noose, and show the court where the true blame lies.” When he did not move, she entreated him. “Would you leave this place in the hands of a pack of murderers? Will you always be remembered as a coward, a poisoner, a killer of the weak? You are a soldier!”
Hugh laughed in her face.
“Oh my dear, idiotic, Mrs. Westerman. You and your kind are babies! Crowther comes from old blood. He knows as well as I-this place has always been in the hands of a pack of murderers! It is a noble tradition. We take our responsibilities most seriously. And what do I care what is said when I am dead? Do you believe it will trouble me in the other place? I will happily swap this hell for another. I did not kill Brook, or poison Cartwright, but perhaps I deserve the noose just the same. Wicksteed has given Bridges my bloody knife, and I will not explain myself further. Let it come! Let them hang me! I shall avoid putting a bullet in my brain to give them all the grand spectacle. Let them see me choke! That’s my gift. The crowd loves to see a noble swing, don’t they, Crowther?”
Crowther was looking into the fireplace. Harriet thought she saw him give a simple sharp nod. She stepped forward again.
“Hugh! Is it Wicksteed? What hold can he have on you that you will not break free even now?”
He looked at her. His face was wet and red with tears; it made the scars across his cheek glisten like fresh meat. He trembled; she held his gaze, willing him to open his lips. He looked hard into her face, then sighed and turned away. His passions seemed to fall from his shoulders, leaving him diminished, weak.
“I am guilty. Do not make an enemy of Wicksteed, Mrs. Westerman. For the sake of your family.”
He let his boot circle in the space of the grate, as if stirring imaginary ashes. Harriet put her hand on his arm, pulling him around to look at her.
“A man murders your friends, has your brother killed, and you go to the noose for him? This is ridiculous, Thornleigh. What possible-”
He clenched his fists.
“Enough! I have my reasons. And it is my fault, Mrs. Westerman.” His fists opened out, anger became supplication in a moment. “I am guilty. Now get the hell out of this house, and stay away. Alexander gave me that advice once. I tried to follow it and him, but it pulls us back. You may escape it yet. Go. Please. Go.”
They left the room, but not his house. Crowther thought at first Mrs. Westerman would be inclined to withdraw. He could feel the eddies of fear and confusion twisting around her. But she did not lead him to the grand entrance of Thornleigh, rather further into the house.
“Are you quite sure about this?” he murmured as soon as he became aware of the direction she was taking.
“Quite sure.” Then she stopped and looked up at him. He noticed the healthy white of her eyes. Wondered how long she had till they reddened with the scars of seeing to resemble his own. “Should we have told him about the children?”
Crowther sighed. “I cannot say. I simply cannot say.”
She seemed satisfied and raised her hand at the door of the housekeeper’s sitting room. A small middle-aged woman lifted the latch to them. Her eyes were red, and the apron over her day-dress tied carelessly. Harriet smiled at her, and saw a glint of relief in her eye.
“Mrs. Dougherty! My companion here is Mr. Crowther. A physician.” She could feel Crowther tense beside her as she said the word, but he did not protest. “We should like to see Lord Thornleigh.” She gave a matter-of-fact sort of smile.
The little woman in front of them looked confused. She rubbed her hands on the linen of her apron and pushed a stray lock of hair back under her cap.
“He is not a freak show, Mrs. Westerman. I am not sure my mistress …” There was a movement behind them. The maid they had rescued from being beaten in the courtyard put her head in the doorway. Her hair was neat again, the wound from Wicksteed’s crop still vivid, but clean.
“I’ll take them, Mrs. Dougherty.” She paused. “Mr. Wicksteed and Lady Thornleigh are taking a walk in the lavender garden.”
Mrs. Dougherty twisted her hands, then shrugged her thin shoulders.
“Very well. Very well.” She then put her head on one side and asked with an unconvincingly casual tone, “I suppose Mrs. Heathcote has not yet had an opportunity to try my jugged hare recipe?”
Harriet graced her with a full-beam smile.
“We are to enjoy it this evening, but she acknowledged you the master as soon as she looked through your notes.”
The little woman’s chin lifted triumphantly. “Indeed. Most fair-minded people would confess I know what I am about.”
That seemed to form their dismissal; they let themselves be led by the maid.
“I am called Patience, ma’am,” she said, before they had gone many steps.
“I am glad to know you,” Harriet told her.
She conducted them to the back stairs, and lifting her long skirts began the ascent to the upper rooms where Lord Thornleigh had been so long confined.
2
Daniel Clode was anxious. Having made good speed through the night, his progress into town was much delayed by the volume of traffic leaving the city. The possibility that he might be too late to prevent some injury to the children pressed him on. The road was crowded with coaches and wagons full of nervous-looking men and weeping women, their possessions bundled around them, children crying and complaining on their laps. The occasional horseman, head down, his animal panting and sweating, flew by, out of town. What horrors, what news needed to reach their masters at such a speed? It seemed as if the populace were fleeing a plague.
He stopped long enough at the last respectable-looking coaching house outside Southwark to hear a little of the riots and to change horses while he crammed his mouth with hard white rolls and weak beer. He would never get used to the chalk in the London bread, or the stink of the water in the basin where he washed his hands. How people could survive in a city where the necessities of life were so treacherous, he would never know. The landlord was too busy with the full road and the panicked commands of his guests to say much, but the serving girl was glad to talk while he ate, keeping herself tucked behind a bend in the wall to hide her idleness from her master. Clode was the sort of man serving girls spent their time over and smiled at. Not that he had ever been aware of it himself. Mostly, as now, his mind had been more concerned with other matters.
“Half the city is on fire, they say.” She twisted a thin cord of her hair in her fingertips and examined the black ends as if she could read her fortune in them. “And the other half as like to burn as not.”
Clode nodded, wiped his mouth and reached for the other white roll on the table, his hunger fiercer than his distaste for it.
“They say even the Jews have put up blue banners and writ ‘we are all good Protestants here’ on the shop fronts.” She sniggered. “Didn’t know they could even write English. Just counting they do, isn’t it?”
When Clode spoke he sent a spray of plastery crumbs onto the table. “Lots of people know how to write.”
She shifted her weight onto one hip and lifted an eyebrow. “Well, I’ve never had need of it here.”
The move exposed her to the view of her master.
“Sephy! There’s other men need serving here!”
She looked over in his direction, her
face a pinched figure of boredom and disgust.
“Coming!” Then, dropping her voice lower, “I shall turn witch and curse the old goat. I know what service he wants.”
She turned and sashayed away, looking back over her shoulder to offer a full smile.
Clode stood, and was out of the door again before his coins had stopped ringing on the tabletop.
They were beyond the level of the state rooms and climbing still into the more rarely used parts of the house before they spoke again.
“How is the wound?”
The maid paused and turned on the stair.
“It smarts, ma’am, but it will heal. I shall not stay here, though. This Hall is evil in its bones. I feel these things.”
She turned to continue the climb.
“I have sometimes wondered if this place had an evil at its heart,” Harriet said.
Crowther had seen too many evils done by living breathing men blamed on malignant spirits, even on God Himself. He saw it as excuse, an abnegation of responsibility. A weakness. He spoke sharply.
“For myself, Mrs. Westerman, I regard such things in the same manner I do the folk tales of sleeping with a pig’s bladder under your bed to bring on the birth of a male child, or leaving bread out for the fairies. I believe in what I can touch and see. If I do not understand it, I think that is a fault of my own intelligence, not proof of its otherworldly nature. I answer the questions of science-the rest I leave to priests and mystics.”
He realized he was speaking with impatience, and regretted it. The women, however, seemed too lost in their own thoughts to catch, or be offended, by his tone.
“There is evil here,” murmured the maid. “I can touch it in this house. I can feel it.” Then, “We are nearly there.”
They climbed another flight into the uppermost rooms of the house, and Crowther found his eyes struggling in the gloom. The wide-open proportions of the lower stories tightened and shrank here, and he had to fight the inclination to stoop as they stood on the bare floorboards of the upper landing.
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