The Anatomist's Wife

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The Anatomist's Wife Page 28

by Anna Lee Huber


  I scolded myself. That was no reason to explain my suspicions to my brother-in-law. If I told him, it should be out of concern for him and his family’s safety. Alana and the children still remained in the nursery, under guard, and as far as I could tell, no one else was in danger from our murderer. Further violence would not be in the killer’s best interest, seeing as they had gone to so much trouble to cast the blame on Lady Stratford. It would not be right to share what I had uncovered with Philip. He was already consumed with worry over Alana’s condition, and exhausted from dealing with the guests, as well as Freya’s foaling. Why should he be made to suffer any more anxiety than he already did just to ease my troubled mind? I could wait a few more hours for Gage’s return.

  Unlocking the door, I glanced back into the shadowed chamber briefly to make certain I had not overlooked anything, and then slipped out into the hallway. When I turned to make my way back down the corridor toward the stairs, my heart leapt into my throat.

  “Faye,” I gasped, pressing a hand over my pounding heart as I leaned back weakly against the door. “My goodness, you startled me.”

  The maid blinked back at me with wide eyes. “Pardon, Madame.”

  “No, no. It’s all right.” I laughed a bit breathlessly. “I’m just a bit jumpy today.”

  The maid nodded hesitantly.

  Pushing away from the door, I brushed a hand down the front of my dress. “How are you?” I asked, remembering the girl’s predicament.

  She swallowed and lifted her chin. “I will survive.”

  I nodded in appreciation of her bravery. I hoped she would find a worthy new employer upon her return to London, and quickly.

  Faye’s eyes slid past me to the door.

  “How is the packing coming along?” I asked, thinking quickly. The maid must be wondering what I had been doing in Lady Godwin’s former bedchamber. “Lady Cromarty asked me to see if you needed anything.”

  The wariness did not leave her eyes. “I believe I have everything.”

  I pressed my hands to my skirts, making certain the letters I had tucked inside were still well concealed. “Well, if you think of anything, please let me know.”

  She nodded.

  I pasted a smile across my face, hoping it looked reassuring, and stepped away from the door. Moving swiftly down the hall, I refused to let myself look back to see whether Faye was watching me. It was clear she didn’t trust me or my reasons for being in Lady Godwin’s chamber. In any case, by tomorrow the truth would be out, and any strange actions on my part would be well justified. However, I didn’t want to give her any reason to spread word of my visit to Lady Godwin’s chamber before Gage returned from Drumchork. The last thing I needed was for the murderer to catch wind of my actions and begin to wonder whether I suspected anything.

  Pausing in my descent of the staircase, I looked up toward the ceiling high above as the drumming rain became deafening, echoing through the space. Its furious pounding was like anvil strikes to my nerves. Closing my eyes, I said a silent prayer for the storms to abate and for Gage to return safely. Then I lifted the skirts of my gown and hurried back to my room to pass the time.

  Once Gage returned, this would all be over. The wait would be the worst part.

  If only I’d been right.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  I waited all afternoon and into the evening. I wrote letters. I sketched. I stretched new canvas across several empty frames, though, because of the rain, I could not prop open the windows and finish preparing them by brushing them with gesso. I paced the floors and tried, rather unsuccessfully, not to glance at the clock every five minutes. But when darkness fell, transforming the cloud-strewn twilight into murky night, I could wait no more.

  Sebastian Gage had not returned to Gairloch. I didn’t know why. The rain had stopped two hours earlier, so the weather could not be blamed for his failure to make the thirty-minute journey back from Drumchork. Perhaps he’d been detained. Perhaps the missing footman had put up a fight when Gage confronted him and accused him of assisting a murderer. I hoped Gage wasn’t being too hard on the fellow. In light of the evidence I now held, I sincerely doubted the man had anything to do with Lady Godwin’s murder or her baby’s burial. In any case, Gage should be bringing the footman back to Gairloch, which left me to wonder, once again, why he hadn’t appeared.

  Maybe Mr. Renshaw had invited him to dinner in the village. Gage would have introduced himself to the squire upon his arrival in Drumchork, and a dinner invitation would likely have been forthcoming. Such a request would only be considered polite, especially when the storms rolled through earlier. However, I couldn’t help thinking of the squire’s two pretty daughters. I gritted my teeth. They were likely fawning over the handsome Mr. Gage like royalty, and he was probably eating it up, relaxing and enjoying himself while I stewed.

  I squeezed my fist around the puzzle piece in my hand, feeling the wooden edges bite into my palm. I was tired of waiting at Gage’s leisure. If he couldn’t be bothered to present himself, then I saw no need to delay further. I would simply have to take matters into my own hands.

  I tossed the puzzle piece down on the table and marched across the room to yank the bellpull. I wanted the truth—I needed it—and I was determined to have this matter resolved before I laid my head down on the pillow. Before my loved ones spent another night under the same roof as a murderer.

  I locked the letters I had taken from Lady Godwin’s room inside my jewelry box with the bloody handkerchief for safekeeping. Then I picked up a page of foolscap and jotted off a quick message to Gage explaining my findings and my intention to speak with Lady Stratford. No matter how much I wished to do otherwise, I knew better than to run off without leaving word of my whereabouts in case Gage returned to the castle and asked for me. Lucy looked at me oddly when I instructed her to slip the note under Gage’s door but, upon seeing my seething countenance, wisely held her tongue.

  The evening air was cool for late summer, even by the Highlands’ standards. I pulled my deep green cloak tighter around me, bowed my head to keep the gusting wind from blowing the hood back, and struck out across the stable yard. It was littered with black puddles, and I was forced to slow my pace to carefully pick my way around them. I jerked my toe back as it slid into one of the inky depths, sending ripples across the water. In the gloom, they appeared bottomless, like cavernous holes an unsuspecting person might tumble into. I shivered and stood still as the moon slipped through a gap in the scuttling clouds overhead and rose in the reflection of one of the pools like a slumbering creature opening its eye. It blinked, making the air seize in my lungs, and then was gone, disappearing behind the smoky gray clouds above that blocked out the stars.

  My heart thudded in my throat, and I considered turning back—to wait for Gage or to ask Philip to accompany me. Surely, this could not be a good omen. But then I saw the lantern swaying in the breeze above the door to the carriage house. Its light beckoned me onward.

  Abandoning propriety, I lifted my skirts and dashed across the yard, hurdling over the puddles in my path. The guard watched my approach with unabashed interest. I was certain I was giving him quite a good look at my legs, but I didn’t care. Let the servant gawk. The creatures lurking in the shadows were far more troubling.

  I lurched to a stop before the guard and tried to smile up at him disarmingly.

  “Lady Darby, how can I help ye?” the footman asked. He searched the stable yard over my shoulder, as if hoping to see someone had accompanied me.

  “I wish to speak with Lady Stratford,” I informed him, still huffing from my mad dash.

  The guard opened his mouth but seemed at a loss for what to say. “But . . . I’m sure . . .”

  “I will speak with her,” I added before he could protest. “If you need to lock me in with Lady Stratford or observe us while we speak,
so be it. But I will speak with her.”

  The guard frowned and looked like he still might try to object. But then he released a long sigh. He shook his head as if in resignation. “Who’m I to complain?” he grumbled, fumbling with the key in the lock. “His lordship won’t be takin’ it oot o’ my hide if yer no’ supposed to be here.”

  I felt a moment’s unease, knowing he spoke the truth. Philip would not be happy with my actions—coming here alone and bullying the guard—but I comforted myself that the end would justify the means. Once we had the real murderer behind lock and key, it wouldn’t matter that I’d left the castle alone at night in order to secure the proof we needed. Besides, I was with the guard now, so technically I was not alone.

  The lock snicked open, and the footman pulled the lantern from the peg above and pushed open the door. We passed through a short, musty hallway with several doors leading off it. I glanced through a door that stood open to the right into a room cluttered with spare carriage parts and tools. Wheels leaned against the walls and leather tacking hung from the exposed timbers of the ceiling. An old carriage seat was shoved into one corner, its leather cushion covered with ragged holes.

  The guard stomped past a door on the left, which I suspected led into the larger part of the building where the carriages were stored, and marched straight toward a heavy oak door in the back. He knocked once. “Visitor,” he called before twisting a key in the lock. “I’ll leave this’n open, but the outer door’ll have to stay locked,” he told me apologetically.

  “I understand.”

  “Just knock when ye want let oot.”

  I thanked him and waited for him to retreat to his post outside before approaching the door he unlocked. Light spilled from beneath it, and I could hear hushed voices within.

  Uncertain how I would be received, I reached out and knocked hesitantly. The voices quieted and a pair of feet shuffled toward the door. It creaked open, and Celeste’s frightened eyes peered out through the crack.

  “Lady Darby!” she gasped.

  “Good evening, Celeste,” I said gently. “I was hoping I might speak with Lady Stratford.” I tried to look past Celeste into the room, but the door blocked my view.

  The maid glanced behind her, presumably to gain permission from her employer, and I hovered for an uncomfortable beat of time while Lady Stratford exercised her prerogative to make me wait. My nerves stretched and tautened, and I was on the verge of saying something to force my way in when Celeste finally stepped aside and allowed me to enter.

  The bachelor quarters were smaller than I anticipated but cozy and well maintained, albeit dark. I imagined that even during the brightest day, the room would remain quite gloomy, for a single tiny window high up near the ceiling on the outer wall was the only source of sunlight. As many of the bachelors I knew preferred to carouse all night and sleep during the daylight hours, I could understand how the dearth of windows would be preferable. It also gave Lady Stratford few options for escape.

  A large bed, covered in black-and-mahogany-striped fabric, dominated the interior wall of the room, while the opposite side of the chamber boasted a writing desk, wardrobe, and a small breakfast table with two chairs. A sideboard rested against the wall beyond the table. It was covered with assorted bottles of liquor, and I wondered if the countess had given in to the urge to drink herself into oblivion. If our situations were reversed, I certainly would have considered it. I was considering it even now, just standing in this space.

  A pair of tan leather chairs was situated before the hearth, which held prime place in the middle of the back wall. This was where Lady Stratford sat glaring at me as I finished my inspection of her prison.

  “I hope you haven’t come here hoping to coax a confession out of me, for you won’t get one,” she announced crisply.

  I took a deep breath to settle my nerves and swallowed my impatience. The countess had every right to be angry with me. I would have to be gentle with her. “That’s not why I’ve come. But I do have some questions for you.”

  “And why should I answer them? So far, your questions have brought me nothing but grief.” Her voice rang with bitterness.

  Ignoring the stab of guilt her words caused me, I inched closer. “Because I think these answers might help prove your innocence.”

  Lady Stratford stared at me blankly.

  “I don’t think you killed Lady Godwin,” I continued, taking the opportunity her silence presented me. “But I think I know who did.” I moved a step closer. “However, I need your help to prove it.”

  “You . . . you don’t think I’m guilty?” she asked uncertainly.

  I shook my head. “I don’t.”

  Lady Stratford’s rigid posture began to crumple, and she cupped a hand over her mouth. Her eyes were shadowed with fatigue and her complexion was pale, but even racked with grief and detained for a crime she didn’t commit, the countess was still impeccably coiffed, with nary a wrinkle in her gown or a hair out of place. It made me feel quite shabby in my own crumpled plum muslin and unruly braided coronet.

  I perched on the edge of the other chair. “Will you help me?”

  She nodded, allowing me a glimpse of the timid hope blossoming inside her, as yet scared to fully bloom. I wanted nothing more than to promise her that she was safe, that everything would be all right, except I knew it never would be again. Not when she learned what I suspected to be true.

  “Do you need a moment,” I asked, pressing my hands into my lap to keep them from fidgeting. I had waited half the day with this weight hanging over my head; I could wait a little longer for her to gather herself.

  The countess sniffed and pulled a lacy handkerchief from her sleeve to dab at her eyes. “No. No. I want this nightmare to be over with. Go ahead. Ask.”

  I shifted in my seat. “First of all, do you know if Lord Stratford has visited Shropshire recently?”

  Lady Stratford blinked in confusion, clearly not having expected such a question. “Why, yes. He went there to view some property he was considering purchasing.”

  I suppressed the urge to snort. It was obvious from the countess’s expression that when Lord Stratford spoke of property, she believed he was talking about land. Unfortunately, I suspected this property was of a much more human variety. “When did he journey there?”

  She tilted her head in thought. “A month ago, may-be two.”

  I nodded. That fit with my suspicions. “Whose idea was it to accept my sister’s invitation to Gairloch? Yours or the earl’s?”

  Her brow furrowed. “Well, I thought it was mine. But now that you mention it, Derek did seem particularly eager to attend. After I discovered Lady Godwin was going to be present, I thought maybe that was the reason why, even though he had broken off his affair with her in May. Am I . . .” Her eyes widened as the direction of my inquiries became clear. “You don’t think . . .”

  I held up my hand to forestall her query. “Just a few more questions. Has Lord Stratford visited you in your rooms?” She colored. “I know it seems an indelicate question, but I assure you it is relevant.”

  She looked down at her hands where they were clasped in her lap. Her knuckles were white. “Yes. He has.” Her eyes lifted to meet mine, and I could see the hurt and disillusionment shining in their depths. “At the time, I found it odd. I even remarked upon it to my maid.” She gestured toward Celeste, who confirmed her words with a nod. “Derek stopped coming to me months ago—around the time Lady Godwin must have discovered she was expecting. I . . . I had tried to convince him we should try again, but he seemed . . . disinterested.” I could hear how much it pained her to discuss these things, but I could not spare her feelings in this. “When he came to me several nights before Lady Godwin’s death, I thought he’d changed his mind. Are . . . are you trying to tell me it was for another reason entirely?�


  “Maybe,” I hedged. My nerves tightened with dread. “Did you ever find him in either your bedchamber or your dressing room at odd times? Times when he had no reason to be there?”

  Lady Stratford shook her head. “No. Not that I can recall. And Celeste never mentioned . . .”

  “I did.” The maid’s soft voice rang through the room like a shout. She still stood next to the door, as if uncertain where else to position herself.

  “What?” The countess sounded genuinely shocked. “What do you mean? Why didn’t you tell me?”

  Celeste shrugged awkwardly, wringing her hands. “I didn’t know if I should,” she stammered before turning to me. “I found his lordship in her ladyship’s bedchamber the night of Lady Godwin’s murder. He told me he was checkin’ on her. I thought it odd, but when I heard ’bout Lady Godwin bein’ murdered and how her body was found in the garden that night, it seemed to make more sense. That’s why I didn’t say nothin’.”

  The countess seemed momentarily nonplussed by the idea that her husband had looked in on her while she was sleeping. Then she shook herself sharply and tossed her handkerchief into her lap. “Enough questions! I want to know what you are implying.” Her eyes were heavy with shadows. “Do you believe that Derek . . .” Her remaining words were swallowed by a choked sound, as if she couldn’t bear to say them aloud. “That he . . . stood back and allowed me to take the blame?”

  “Oh, I don’t think he stood back. I think he deliberately set about blaming you.”

  Lady Stratford looked as if she might be sick.

  “How else do you explain your scissors being found near the body and your shawl wrapped around the baby?” I pressed, wanting to break through any illusions she might still hold about her husband’s goodness.

  She pressed a fist to her mouth, and I wondered whether it was to hold back a protest or a sob. My gut churned with fury and disgust, and the man wasn’t even my husband.

 

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