Treacherous Is the Night

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Treacherous Is the Night Page 2

by Anna Lee Huber


  “Three weeks.”

  “Daphne!”

  “I know, I know. I should have asked you sooner. But . . . I was afraid you’d say no.”

  I scowled, furious at this bit of manipulation. “It would serve you right if I did. Let the woman bilk you of all your money. See if I care.”

  I folded my arms over my chest and turned to stare out the tall Georgian-style windows where a light summer rain fell. Sidney’s newspaper rattled, and I was certain he’d heard at least this outburst. That is, if he wasn’t already remorselessly listening to the entire conversation.

  Daphne’s eyes flicked toward him before she shifted forward on the sofa, leaning across the distance toward me. “You have every right to be furious with me. I would be cross, too, if I were in your shoes. I know how you feel about these sorts of things. Which is precisely why I need you to be the one who comes with me.” She pressed a hand to the powder blue serge of my skirt. “Please, Ver. I wouldn’t ask you if it wasn’t extremely important. You know I can’t go alone.”

  She was right about that, and I was relieved to hear her admit it. A good con woman would recognize how much she’d loved her brother, how terribly she missed him. And she would also quickly realize how naïve and trusting she was. After all, the success of her scams depended upon that knowledge. She would twist that to her advantage if someone wasn’t there to shield her.

  I turned to look at her and then wished I hadn’t. Then I wouldn’t have seen that cursed gleam of hope shining in her eyes. Or watched it dim as I remained silent.

  She heaved a sigh. “I suppose I shall just have to take my sister then. Though she’ll make the entire session about her. Who knows if I’ll even be able to slide in a word edgewise?” She frowned. “She’ll probably wish to summon Humphrey, and you know how tiresome her husband was in life. Well, to hear Melanie talk, he’s even more so in death.”

  I couldn’t help but crack a smile. Not that I believed a medium had actually ever summoned Humphrey. But if she was skilled enough, she would read Melanie’s clues and respond appropriately.

  However, I sobered quickly at the preposterous idea of Melanie being trusted to protect Daphne. Melanie was enough of a spendthrift that no matter how deeply she was taken in by a medium, such a person would never be able to defraud her of all her money. But Daphne was much more impressionable, and her heart bruised easily. I’d seen it often enough. The walls I’d been able to erect around myself during the war, to shield me from the full impact of hearing of yet another death, seemed nonexistent for her. She felt it all. Perhaps in the end, that meant she was better off than the stilted, jumbled mess I’d become, but it also meant she was vulnerable.

  I swallowed my affront, reaching across to clutch her hand. “You’re determined to see this medium? I can’t sway you to let it go?”

  She shook her head. “I know you mean well, Ver, but I’m going, no matter what you say.” Her mouth set with stubborn determination.

  I glanced up at the ceiling, just knowing I would regret this. “Then, I’ll go.”

  Her eyes widened. “Truly?”

  “Yes.”

  She gasped in delight and sprung forward to embrace me, enveloping me in the scent of lavender. “Oh, thank you, thank you! You’ll see. There won’t be any shenanigans.”

  I smiled tightly, wishing I could believe that.

  She gathered up her hat and gloves, and hurried toward the door, lest I change my mind.

  Sidney lowered his newspaper as she approached. “Good morning, Miss Merrick.”

  “Hullo, Sidney. And remember, I told you to call me Daphne. I’m not about to stand on ceremony with my dearest friend’s long-lost husband.” She grinned at me over her shoulder, though the wattage was a shade too bright. I could tell she was somewhat unnerved by Sidney. Since his return, he was more reserved, more intense, and combined with his brooding, dark good looks, it was difficult not to feel off-balance. But nonetheless, I appreciated the concerted effort she was making to befriend him. Even if it was a tad too relentless in its cheer.

  His answering smile was polite. “Of course. Shall I ring down to ask the doorman to hail you a cab?”

  “No, I’ve brought my umbrella, so I think I shall walk,” she replied breezily, already bustling out into our entry hall. “Goodbye!”

  At the click of the door to our flat closing, Sidney dropped all pretense of reading the newspaper. “What was all that about?”

  I crossed the room to the matching sofa closest to his chair, folding my legs underneath me as I leaned against the arm. He was turned out quite impeccably today in a crisp white shirt and deep blue suit that offset his eyes. His dark hair was once again cut neat and trim, the curls smoothed flat, save for that one stubborn lock that insisted on falling over his brow—as if to tip off unwary strangers that his interior was not quite so ruthlessly set in order.

  “She wants me to attend a séance with her tonight after our dinner at the Langham’s.”

  “Well, I suppose she at least shows some sense in taking you along with her.” He dropped the newspaper on the table and reached over to remove one of the Turkish cigarettes he preferred from its silver box. “I suspect if you sent her off to sell a cow, she’d return with a handful of beans.”

  I sighed at his derisive tone of voice. He’d yet to warm to Daphne. He thought her flighty and ingenuous, both counts I couldn’t entirely dispute. His wit was darker, more sardonic since his return, but on this matter he usually kept his opinions to himself. Especially after I’d explained what a boon she’d been to me during the war.

  “She’s not quite so foolish as that,” I retorted.

  His expression as he lit his fag was doubtful. “I still have difficulty imagining her working for the Secret Service.” He exhaled a stream of smoke, tilting his head in consideration. “Unless it’s all a charade.”

  “I told you she worked for counterespionage, managing the Registry.” A massive filing system that kept track of every foreigner or suspicious person on British soil. “And artless as Daphne might seem, she’s not stupid, and very good at minding her tongue.”

  I still found it odd to be sharing such information with him after I’d spent the entire war hiding it. I’d been forbidden to reveal my part in the Secret Service to anyone. Very few people even knew of the agency’s existence, particularly the branch in which I worked, handling the military intelligence from overseas. Later in the war, Sidney had grown suspicious about the true nature of my war work, and uncovered the truth by getting a colleague of mine drunk, a man who also happened to be an old school chum of his. However, he’d not revealed to me that he knew what my real war work was until after he returned from the dead.

  It still irked me that he wouldn’t tell me who had betrayed me. Loose lips were extremely dangerous in that line of work. I could only hope the fellow hadn’t shared sensitive information with someone less honorable than Sidney.

  “Regardless, she doesn’t work there anymore,” I added, uncomfortable with this turn in our conversation. Just as I had been let go a few months after the armistice, my services no longer needed, what with the men returning from overseas.

  I still didn’t know what Sidney thought of my having worked for the Secret Service, and part of me was afraid to ask. After all, there were many who thought of spies, particularly women ones, as sordid, licentious, and untrustworthy. The manner in which they were portrayed in books and in films at the cinema did not help, for they usually fit the mold of the infamous Mata Hari rather than the more realistic portrait of the vast majority of the women I had known in the service.

  I resisted the urge to squirm under his regard, uncertain what he was thinking. Whatever it was, it wasn’t light or frivolous.

  He exhaled again. “So you’re attending a séance at this . . . Madame Zozza’s.”

  So he had been listening, at least to part of our conversation. I rested my chin on my hands. “It appears so. What of you?” A sudden thought occurred to me. �
��Will you be all right?”

  I hadn’t ventured far from his side in the past four weeks, and the few times I had gone out in the evening without him, I’d returned home to find him staring morosely into the fire while he nursed a glass of whiskey.

  His mouth twisted in mockery. “Better hide the key so I don’t wander about the corridors in my dressing gown, shooting imaginary Bosche.”

  I flushed. “I was not suggesting you would do any such thing.”

  “Perhaps not, but it’s always possible, right?” he challenged lightly.

  The unsettling reality of his nightmares lay heavy between us. He had yet to pass a night without having at least one. And the more tired he was, the more quickly they seemed to come. The worst were so frightening I had to wake him, lest he disturb the entire building with his shouting. Once he’d lashed out at me before coming to his senses, to realize he was in bed with his wife, and not struggling with a German in the trenches.

  He lifted his hand to smooth back his wayward lock of hair, little good it did, for it fell right back over his brow. “I believe I’ll meet some friends for drinks. Perhaps go to the club.” His lips curled into the semblance of a smile. “I’m sure I’ll find something to amuse myself.”

  I nodded, not knowing what to say. I never seemed to know what to say. Not anymore.

  Perhaps I should have asked more questions. Perhaps I should have made him talk. But then that might mean I would also have to share what troubled me, what kept me awake at night. And I wasn’t sure I was ready for that. Not yet.

  He ground his cigarette out in the ashtray on the table and rose from his chair to come sit next to me on the sofa. “I wanted to discuss our retiring to the cottage.”

  It took all my self-possession not to react to his statement, but even so I wasn’t certain he hadn’t seen apprehension flicker in my eyes as I lowered my feet to face him.

  He took hold of my hands. “Now that the initial furor over my return and the recent events at Umbersea Island has diminished somewhat, I thought it might be a good time for us to get away for a while. Just the two of us.” His eyes gleamed with an intensity I felt in the center of my chest. “The cottage in Sussex seems the natural choice.”

  It was true. Once word of his survival and our part in unmasking a small band of traitors became known, we’d had little peace. I’d always received numerous invitations, but the torrent that arrived in the post had overwhelmed even me. Add to that the journalists and photographers dogging our steps and snapping pictures of us, and it was all a bit jarring, particularly for Sidney. His fortunes had swung from facing the very real fear of a court-martial for desertion—a trial that likely would have resulted in imprisonment and public condemnation if he’d failed to prove sufficient evidence of the treasonous plot—to suddenly being lauded and courted by everyone, from the man seated next to him on the underground who had seen his picture in the newspapers, to the very king himself.

  As such, we’d had little time to begin mending the damage war and separation had wrought upon our marriage. In many ways we felt like strangers, for neither of us was the same person we’d been when we married in the autumn of 1914, just days before he marched off to the trenches. The snatches of time we’d had together during his short leaves from the front had been but interludes, fever dreams. This was reality. One I’d not been prepared to face given his reported death.

  He was right. If we were ever to make a go of it, to patch this rift between us, then we would have to do so in private. But that also meant giving up our fears, our insecurities, and revealing those things we might rather remain hidden. In that sense, the cottage was a risk. One I was as terrified of taking as not.

  “All right,” I replied placidly, though I felt anything but. “However, we’ve already accepted the invitation to the Duchess of Northumberland’s ball.”

  There was no real reason we needed to attend. This was but a paltry attempt to delay the inevitable. One Sidney must recognize. Even so, he did not push.

  “After, then,” he said. Perhaps he needed a reprieve as well. “Just so long as we’re gone before the bloody Peace Day celebrations they all seem so determined I attend.”

  I knew Sidney wasn’t the only former soldier dreading the festivities, but most of the others were not being pressed to be put on display.

  I had no more desire to attend than Sidney, even if my abhorrence wasn’t so pronounced, so I readily agreed. “I’ll write to the Froggets and ask them to air out the cottage and hire any additional staff needed for the rest of the summer.”

  “Tell them to be sure the cellars are restocked. Oh, and ask them to clean out the carriage house as well. I’ll need some place to store the Pierce-Arrow,” he remarked, rattling off what appeared to be his most pressing concerns—booze and his prized motorcar.

  “I trust you don’t plan on indulging in those simultaneously.”

  “What? And risk my motorcar? Not a chance.”

  “I’m more concerned with your noggin.”

  He draped his arm across the back of the settee, his eyes twinkling with amusement. “Don’t worry, darling. I don’t plan on making you a widow again so soon.”

  “See that you don’t,” I replied, rising to my feet. “I don’t relish being forced to wear black.” I crossed toward the door but paused to offer one last parting jest over my shoulder. “It’s simply not my color.”

  CHAPTER 2

  Daphne grinned at me in anticipation as I climbed into the idling taxicab. In the dim light of the streetlamps, I could see she was wearing her royal blue gown. It was one of my favorites for it complimented her coloring so well.

  “I hope you didn’t put on those glad rags simply for the sake of this séance,” I remarked, feeling rather dowdy seated next to her in my modest willow green evening gown.

  “No, I had dinner with Stephen Powell at the Savoy.”

  I arched my eyebrows. “And you sacrificed his company to attend this farce?”

  Her smile turned long-suffering. “It’s not a farce. And in any case, he was well acquainted with Gil. He understood.”

  Perhaps. But regardless of his thoughts on Spiritualism, somehow, I doubted he was pleased to be discarded in favor of the possibility of her speaking with her dead brother. In any case, Stephen was not my concern. Besides, if he’d remained at the Savoy, I was sure he’d meet plenty of young women willing to dance with him and help him forget his disappointment.

  I studied Daphne’s profile in the light and shadow of the passing streetlamps as they flickered through the motorcar’s window. She almost seemed to vibrate with nervous energy.

  “You could have asked Stephen to attend with you,” I remarked.

  She shook her head. “I don’t know him well enough. It would have been much too awkward. That’s why I refuse to attend the stage shows. To be singled out in such a large crowd.” She shivered. “No, thank you. Victoria Revel’s deceased fiancé once contacted her through a medium at the theater. She said it was both mortifying and thrilling.”

  “Yes, well, Victoria Revel couldn’t hold her tongue if her life depended on it. She likely beat her gums to anyone in that theater who would listen. The medium’s assistants probably heard everything she said and then reported it to the medium to use in her show.”

  Daphne gasped. “That’s perfectly dreadful.” She frowned. “But surely, they’re not all that way. After all, there must be something to them if so many people are attending.”

  I opened my mouth to refute that, having a far lower opinion of people’s gullibility than she did. After all, they’d swallowed down all the war propaganda nice and neat. But she cut me off.

  “Please, promise me you’ll keep an open mind.” She reached down to clasp my hand where it rested against the seat. “I admit most mediums are likely frauds, but that doesn’t mean they all are.” Her brow furrowed. “You’re very clever, Verity, but one day you’re going to experience something you can’t explain.”

  I wanted to s
coff at this suggestion, but I knew doing so would only make her more intractable. After all, if I wished to convince Daphne of the medium’s trickery after the fact, then I would have to at least pretend to be receptive to the possibility she was genuine.

  “You’re right,” I relented. “I’ll try to be more objective.”

  “Thank you.” She squeezed my fingers and then released them. “Who knows? Perhaps she’ll even be able to make contact with Rob for you.”

  “Don’t,” I snapped, unwilling to broach the subject of my second brother’s passing. Especially not in such a context.

  Daphne’s face blanched, her own features crumpling in response to the pain she heard in my taut reply. I felt an answering lump rise in my throat and turned away.

  Rob had been dead for four years, his aeroplane shot down over France in July 1915. And yet I struggled every day to push him from my thoughts. With Sidney’s return, my brother’s specter now loomed even larger.

  Swallowing hard, I focused my thoughts on the damp streets and buildings passing outside the window. We’d entered Chelsea, I realized—that enclave of so many artists, poets, and writers. I wondered if this Madame Zozza saw herself similarly.

  The taxicab turned into a small side street off Cheyne Walk, and drew to a stop before a warm redbrick town house on the corner with black wrought-iron railings and a black door. It was rather inconspicuous in appearance. Not even a swath of exotic curtains to liven up the bow windows, only a solid, dark color drawn tight.

  I glanced at Daphne, curious whether we were in the right place, but she said not a word as she climbed from the cab. Fortunately, the rain had ceased, so there was no need to make a mad dash to the door. The fringe of my dress brushed my legs as I followed her out of the cab and up the short flight of stairs.

  The door opened swiftly to Daphne’s knock, and we were ushered inside by a young woman of about twenty-five. Her hair was pulled back severely from her face, and her stark clothing did nothing for her coloring or her shape. I presumed she was an assistant of some kind to the medium, for she greeted us coolly and took our wraps. Though she strove to feign disinterest, I caught her sneaking glances at me. I presumed, like so many others, she’d seen my photograph in the papers. She directed us into a sitting room, which would not have been out of place in any British middle-class home, where we were supposed to order our thoughts in preparation for the session. In all honesty, I didn’t hear much of what she said in her crisp French accent once we crossed the threshold into the room, for something else had caught my eye. Or rather someone.

 

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