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"Oh well ..." She was loath to put it into words, but the agreement was there in her face.
"He'd be Miss Eilish's husband," he prompted.
"Aye, he would. Now there's a great beauty, so they say. Not that I've ever seen her myself, y'understand? But they say she's the loveliest thing ever to set foot in Edinburgh."
"What else?"
"What?"
"What else do they say about her?"
"Why nothing. Isn't that enough?"
He smiled, in spite of himself. He imagined what Hester would have said to a description like that.
"What is she like, her ambitions, her ideas?"
"Oh, for certain I never heard that."
"And Mrs. Farraline herself?"
"A fine lady, so they say. Always was, for years back. Colonel Farraline was a gentleman, generous with his money, and she followed on the same. Always givin' to the city. Poor Major Farraline, that's the younger brother, now he's a different kettle of fish. Drinks like a sot, he does. Hardly ever sober. Shame that, when a gentleman with all his opportunities goes to the bottle."
"Yes it is a shame. Do you know why? Was there some tragedy?"
She pursed her lips.
"Not that I ever heard. But what would I know? Just a weak man, I suppose. World's full o' them. Looks for the answer to all o' life's problems in the bottom of a bottle. You'd think after a score or so they'd realize it wasn't there-but not them."
"What about the last son, Kenneth?" Monk asked, since she seemed to have exhausted the subject of Hector.
She shrugged again. "Just a young gentleman with more time and money than sense. He'll grow out of it by and by, I expect. Pity his mother isn't here any longer to see he does, but I daresay the Fiscal will. Wouldn't want him doing something stupid and spoiling the family name. Or making a foolish marriage. He wouldn't be the first young dandy to do that."
"Does he not work at the family business?" Monk asked.
"Oh aye, so I've heard. Don't know what he does, but no doubt it would be easy enough to find out." A strange expression lightened her eyes, curiosity, disbelief and a kind of beginning of excitement. "Do you think one of them killed their own mother?" Then caution took hold again. "Never! They're very well respected people, Mr. Monk. Highly thought of. Takes a big part in city affairs, does Mr. Alastair. A lot to do with government, as well as being the Fiscal."
"Yes, I don't suppose it's likely," Monk said judiciously. "But it could have been a maid. It's possible, and I've got to look at everything."
"'Course you have," she agreed, straightening her ap.r.o.n and making to move. "Well, I'd best be leaving you to get on about it then." She went to the door and turned back. "And ye'll be here for a week or two, right enough?"
"I will," he agreed with a shadow of a smile. "Thank you, Mrs. Forster."
As soon as he had unpacked the few clothes he had brought with him, he wrote a short note to Rathbone, giving his new address at 20, Gra.s.smarket, Edinburgh, and after a brief luncheon at the inn, went to post his letter and then made his way back up towards the new town and Ainslie Place. The local public house would be a good spot at which to make inquiries about the family. In all possibility the footman or grooms would drink there. He would have to be extremely discreet, but he was used to that, it was his trade.
However, it was too early in the day now, and by dinnertime he would be at the Farraline house. He would fill in the afternoon by learning exactly which of the local tradesmen dealt with number seventeen, then tomorrow and the next day he could track down delivery boys, who in turn might know maids and bootboys, and discover more about the daily lives of the Farralines.
And of course there would be the routine tasks of questioning Mary Farraline's physician who had prescribed the medicine, finding the exact dosage normally given; and then the apothecary who had made up the prescription, and pressing him in the possibility of an error, which naturally he would deny.
And then he would have to search for all the other apothecaries in Edinburgh to prove Hester had not purchased digitalis from them, and there was always the remote hope they could identify one of the Farraline family as having done so.
Monk arrived back at Ainslie Place, faultlessly elegant, at seven o'clock, as he had been directed. He was admitted by McTeer, as lugubrious as before, but this time unquestioningly polite, and shown into the withdrawing room, where the family was awaiting the announcement of dinner.
The room was large and very formal, but he had no time to spare for looking at it. His entire attention was immediately absorbed by the people who, as one, were staring at him as he was shown in. A lesser man would have found it unnerving. Monk was too worried and inwardly angry to have any such misgivings. He faced them with head high and eyes unwavering.
Oonagh was the first to come forward. She was dressed in black, of course, as they all were. One mourned at least a full year for a relative as close as a mother. But her gown was beautifully cut, quite moderate in fashion, the hoops of her skirt not extreme, and the lamplight shone on the rich, pale gleam of her hair, making one think she might well have chosen the color, or lack of it, for effect as well as duty.
"Good evening, Mr. Monk," she said graciously. She did not smile, yet there was a warmth in her eyes and her voice which made him feel more welcome than he could have expected in the circ.u.mstances.
"Good evening, Mrs. McIvor," he replied. "It is most gracious of you to be so courteous to me. You have turned a ch.o.r.e into an experience I shall not forget."
She received the compliment as it was intended, a little more than a mere politeness; and then she turned to indicate the man who stood almost to the mantelshelf, in the warmest and most comfortable place in the room. He was slightly above average height, slenderly built but beginning to put on weight around the waist. His hair was as fair as hers, but thickly waved, and already spa.r.s.e at the front. His features were aquiline and distinguished, perhaps not ordinarily handsome, but certainly imposing.
"This is my elder brother, Alastair Farraline, the Procurator Fiscal," she said, introducing them. Then, turning to Alastair, she added, "As I told you earlier, Mr. Monk has come up from London to make quite certain that the trial produces no unpleasant surprises through our having taken too much for granted."
Alastair surveyed Monk with cool, very blue eyes. His expression did not change except for the slightest tightening of the curves of his lips.
"How do you do, Mr. Monk," he replied. "Welcome to Edinburgh. I cannot see the necessity of your journey, myself. It seems overcautious to me. But I am glad that the prosecution in London regards the matter as of sufficient importance to dispatch someone up here to make certain of things. I have no idea what they are afraid of. There can be no defense."
Monk bit back the response that rose in him. He must never, for an instant, forget why he was here. Only the truth was important, whatever it cost to find it. "I can think of none," he agreed, his voice unexpectedly harsh. "I imagine they may well be desperate when they antic.i.p.ate the prospect of facing a jury."
Alastair smiled bleakly. A flicker in his face betrayed that he had heard the edge to Monk's tone and taken it for horror at the crime. It must never occur to him that Monk's outrage was not against Hester, but on her behalf.
"I imagine it will be a formality," he said grimly. "Enough to satisfy the law that she has been represented."
Oonagh turned to a dark-haired man standing some distance back from the rest of them. His features were quite different in character, the very shape of his head broader and less angular. He could have been a member of the family only by marriage. His expression was brooding, his face full of unexpressed emotion.
"My husband, Baird McIvor," Oonagh said with a charming smile, though still looking at Monk. "He manages the family company, since my father's death. Perhaps you already knew that?" It was only a rhetorical question, to remind them all of Monk's purpose.
"How do you do, Mr. McIvor," Monk responded.
"How do you do," Baird replied. His voice was precise, a little sibilant, his diction perfect, but Monk instantly caught a shadow of regional flavor, and in a moment realized it was Yorkshire. So Baird McIvor was not only an Englishman, but from that wild and proudest of counties, almost a small country to itself. Hester had not mentioned that. Perhaps her ear had not placed the intonation. Like most women, she was more interested in relationships.
Next Oonagh turned to a man of barely average height and long face like her own, but even fairer hair which surrounded his head in an aureole of close curls. Superficially he resembled the Farralines, but the differences were easy to see, the less generous mouth with carefully chiseled lips, and the ruler-straight nose. And there was something different in his manner as well, a confidence born of intellect, not status or power. Curious how such fractional things, the angle of a head, a furrow between the brows, a hesitation, a measuring as if of a potential threat, could give away a man's origins even before he spoke.
"This is my brother-in-law, Quinlan Fyffe," Oonagh said, looking first to him and then back at Monk. "He is a master at printing, fortunately for us, and brilliant at business of every sort." She did not use the slight condescension an English gentlewoman would have towards trade; she spoke of it with admiration. But then the Farralines were not gentry-they had made their own wealth, and presumably were proud of their skills. Her father had begun the company, not merely as owner but as proprietor. She would have no false vanity about idleness and the superiority of those who could afford to spend their lives in leisure.
"How do you do, Mr. Fyffe," Monk acknowledged.
"And Quinlan's wife, my sister Eilish," Oonagh continued, smiling at the younger woman with gentleness, and then glancing back at Quinlan and touching his arm. It was an odd, familiar gesture, as if she were in some way again giving her sister to him, or perhaps reminding him of the event.
After what Mrs. Forster had said, Monk regarded Eilish with interest, and was prepared to be disappointed, even condescending. One glance at her swept away all such indifference. Her beauty was not merely a matter of flawless features, it had a radiance, almost a luminescence, that touched the imagination, and a grace that stirred all manner of half-forgotten dreams. Looking at her, Monk was not sure if he even liked it; it was disturbing, self-sufficient, lacking in the vulnerability which usually appealed to him in feminine beauty. He liked a certain imperfection-it made a woman seem fragile, attainable. But he could not possibly dismiss her either. When one had seen Eilish Farraline, one could not forget her.
She looked at him with very little curiosity, as if her attention were not fully engaged. It occurred to him that perhaps she was too absorbed in herself to occupy her thoughts with anyone else.
The moment the introductions had been effected they were interrupted by the entrance of the nominal mistress of the house. Deirdra Farraline was small and dark with a vitality powerful enough to make her rather scruffy black gown seem irrelevant and her lack of jewelry an oversight of no importance. She had none of the extraordinary beauty of her sister-in-law, but hers was a face that pleased Monk the moment he saw her. There was warmth in her, and humor, and he felt he might discover yet more admirable qualities in her, upon acquaintance.
"Good evening, Mr. Monk," she said as soon as she had been introduced. "I hope we shall be of a.s.sistance to you." She smiled at him, but looked beyond him almost immediately, something else upon her mind. "Has anyone seen Kenneth? It really is too bad of him!"
"Don't wait," Alastair said tartly. "He can catch up with us when he arrives, or go without. His behavior these days is totally thoughtless. I shall have to speak to him." His face tightened. "One would have thought in the circ.u.mstances he would have shown a little family loyalty. It is more than time we found out who this woman is he is pursuing, and if she is suitable."
"Don't worry about it now, my dear," Oonagh said quietly. "You have more than enough to attend to. I'll speak with Kenneth. I daresay he did not like to bring her here just at the moment."
He looked at her with a flash of relief, then smiled. It altered his whole face. With a little imagination Monk could visualize the youth he had been and see something of the closeness between brother and sister. He glanced at Oonagh, and wondered if in fact she were the older, in spite of appearance to the contrary.
"Very well," Deirdra said hastily. "McTeer informs me dinner is served. Let us go through to the dining room. Mr. Monk?"
"Thank you," he accepted, pleased that it was she who had asked him.
The meal was good, but not lavish, and Alastair presided at the head of a long, oak refectory table with gravity, as suited the occasion, but perfectly adequate courtesy. Kenneth did not appear, and Monk saw no sign of Hector Farraline, whom Hester had described. Perhaps he was too inebriated to attend.
"Maybe I missed the explanation," Quinlan began as the soup was cleared away and the beef served. "But what is it you have come to Edinburgh to accomplish, Mr. Monk? We know nothing of that wretched woman, beyond what she told us herself, which presumably is lies anyway."
A shudder of anger crossed Oonagh's face, but she controlled it almost immediately.
"You have no cause to say that, Quin," she reproved. "Do you really suppose I would have sent Mother with someone who had no proof of her ident.i.ty or her qualifications?"
Pure malice gleamed for an instant in Quinlan's face, then he hid it beneath respect. "I am quite sure, my dear Oonagh, that you would not knowingly have sent her anywhere at all with a murderess, but it seems indisputable that you did so unknowingly."
"Oh that's beastly!" Eilish burst out, glaring at him.
He turned towards her, smiling, completely unperturbed by her anger or her disgust. Monk wondered if he was used to it, or if he was truly indifferent. Did he take some perverse pleasure in shocking her? Perhaps it was the sharpest reaction she was capable of feeling, and to arouse that was better than mere apathy. Still, the nature of their relationship was probably irrelevant to Mary Farraline's murder, and that was what mattered. All else was peripheral.
"My dear Eilish," Quinlan said with mock concern. "It is undoubtedly tragic, but it is also unarguably true. Isn't that why Mr. Monk is here? Mary was robust enough; she could have lasted for years. She was certainly not absentminded or clumsy, and anyone less suicidal I have never met."
"You are unnecessarily indelicate," Alastair said with a frown. "Please remember you are in the presence not only of ladies, but ladies newly bereaved."
Quinlan's fair eyebrows shot up, wrinkling his brow.
"And what would be the delicate way of putting it?" he inquired.
Baird McIvor glowered at him.
"The delicate way would have been to hold your tongue altogether, but since n.o.body thought to tell you so, it would be too much to expect of you."
"Really-" Deirdra began, and was cut off by Oonagh's decisive interruption.
"If we must quarrel over the dinner table"-she waved a slender hand-"let it at least be over something that matters. Miss Latterly brought excellent references with her, and I have no doubt whatever that she was in the Crimea with Miss Nightingale and that as a nurse she was both skilled and diligent. I can only a.s.sume she succ.u.mbed to a momentary temptation, brought about by some circ.u.mstance in her own life of which we know nothing, and that when it was too late, she panicked. It may conceivably even have been remorse." She shot a quick glance at Monk, her eyes wide and bright. "Mr. Monk is here to make sure that the case against her is perfect and her defense counsel can spring no surprises upon us. I think it would be in all our best interests for us to a.s.sist him as we may."
"Of course it would," Alastair said quickly. "And we shall do so. Pray tell us what you wish from us, Mr. Monk. I have no idea."
"Perhaps we could begin with everyone giving as exact an account as they can of the day Miss Latterly was here," Monk answered. "That would at least define more closely the times at which she had opportunity to put the brooch in her bag, or to tamper with the medicine cabinet." As soon as he had said it he realized how he had betrayed himself. He felt his face burn and his stomach go cold.
There was a moment's silence around the table.
Alastair frowned, glanced at Oonagh, then at Monk.
"What makes you think she did either of those things here in this house, Mr. Monk?"
Everyone was watching him, Deirdra with curiosity, Eilish with anxiety, Quinlan with contempt, Baird with guarded interest, Oonagh with humor and something close to pity.
Monk's brain raced. How could he extricate himself from the trap he had sprung upon himself? He could think of no lie that would serve. They were waiting. He must say something!
"You think it was spontaneous?" he asked slowly, looking from one to another. "Which did she do first, steal the brooch or mix the poison?"
Deirdra winced.
Eilish let out a little grunt of distress.
Quinlan smiled at Monk. "You make my attempt of indelicacy look amateur," he said pleasantly.
Eilish put her hands up to her face.
Baird shot Quinlan a look of venom.
"I imagine Mr. Monk is doing it for a purpose, Quin, not simply out of malice," Deirdra said quietly.
"Quite," Monk agreed. "How do you imagine it happened?" Unconsciously he looked at Oonagh. In spite of the fact that Alastair was the head of the family, and Deirdra the mistress of the house, he felt Oonagh was the strongest, that it was she who had taken what he imagined had been Mary's place.
"I-I admit, I had not thought of it at all," she said hesitantly. "It is not something I had-wished to think of."
"Mr. Monk, is this really necessary?" Alastair's nose wrinkled in distaste for the crudity of it. "If it is, perhaps we could discuss it in my study afterwards, away from the ladies?"
Monk had no gentlemanly delusions about the emotional strength of women. In a flash of memory astoundingly vivid he recalled women he had known in the past whose courage and endurance had held families together through illness, poverty, bereavement, social disgrace and financial ruin, and who were perfectly capable of keeping a stiff lip and steady eye in the face of all human weakness and extremity. When it came to raw nature, they were much less shockable than men.
"I would prefer to discuss it with the ladies present," he said aloud, smiling around his teeth at Alastair. "It has been my experience that they are far more observant of people, especially other women, and their memories are usually excellent. I would be very surprised if they do not remember a great deal more of Miss Latterly than you do, for example."
Alastair looked at him thoughtfully.
"I daresay you are right," he conceded after several seconds. "Very well. But not this evening. I have some papers I have to read tonight. Perhaps you would care to come for luncheon on Sunday, after kirk? That would give you an opportunity to conduct whatever other inquiries you have to make in the area. I a.s.sume you will wish to see the house. And the servants, of course."
"Thank you. That is most thoughtful of you," Monk accepted. "With your permission I shall do both, perhaps tomorrow. I should also like to speak with the family physician. And I should be delighted to dine with you on Sunday. What time would be suitable?"
"A quarter to one," Alastair replied. "Now, to speak of something pleasanter. Have you been to Edinburgh before, Mr. Monk?"
Monk returned to the Gra.s.smarket deep in thought, trying to see in the people in Ainslie Place the emotions Hester had outlined so briefly, and to build on them something darker than the very natural, prosperous trading family that they appeared. Certainly Quinlan and Baird McIvor did not like each other. It might have had some ugly cause, but it might equally easily be simply a natural antipathy of two men who had all the wrong things in common-arrogance, hasty temper and ambition-and none of the right ones-such as background, humor or tolerance.
But he was extremely tired after a poor night on the train and the shattering news of the previous day. Speculation now was pointless. He could observe them all on Sunday, time enough then to form theories. Tomorrow he would begin with the family physician, whose name Alastair had given him, and the apothecaries. After that it would be a matter of other sources for general information, the nearest public house which the male servants might occasionally frequent, errand and delivery boys, street peddlers and crossing sweepers who might have an observant eye and, for a few pence, a ready tongue.
"Aye," the physician said dubiously, regarding Monk with profound suspicion. "I treated Mrs. Farraline. A fine lady she was too. But ye'll be knowing that anything that pa.s.sed between us was in confidence?"
"Of course," Monk agreed, keeping his temper with difficulty. "I merely wish to know the exact dosage of the heart medicine you prescribed for her...."
"For why? What affair is it o' yours, Mr. Monk? Did ye no' say ye were to do with the prosecution o' that wretched nurse who killed her? I heard she gave her two doses, is that no' true?" He looked at Monk through narrowed eyes.
"Yes it is," Monk said very carefully, keeping his voice level. "But it needs proving beyond doubt in the court of law. All the details must be checked. Now, Dr. Crawford, will you please tell me precisely what you prescribed, was it exactly the same as usual, and who was the apothecary who made it up?"