there seemed no logical answer. She had no doubt that Alison had married Papa for the money—for her all her airs at the tea, there was nothing in the way that Alison behaved in private that made Eleanor think that her stepmother found Papa's absence anything other than a relief. But why did she seem to take such pleasure in tormenting Eleanor?
There didn't seem to be an answer.
Unless she was hoping that Eleanor would be driven to run away from home.
And if Alison had wanted to be rid of her by
She must have dozed off a little, because the faint, far-off sound of the door knocker made her start. At the sound of voices below, she glanced out the window to see the automobile belonging to Alison's solicitor, Warrick Locke, standing at the gate, gleaming wetly in the lamplight. He looked like something out of a Dickens novel, all wire-rimmed glasses, sleek black suits and sleek black hair and too-knowing face.
Someone uttered an exclamation of anger. It sounded like Alison. Eleanor leaned her forehead against the cold glass again; she felt feverish now, and the glass felt good against her aching head. And anyway, the window- seat was more comfortable than the lumpy mattress of her bed.
Her door was thrust open and banged into the foot of the bed. She jerked herself up, and stared at the door.
Lauralee stood in the doorway with the light behind her. 'Mother wants you, Eleanor,' she said in an expressionless voice. 'Now.'
Eleanor cringed, trying to think of what she could have done wrong. 'I was just going to bed—' she began.
The stair came out in the kitchen, which at this hour was empty of servants—but not of people. Alison was there, and Carolyn, and Warrick Locke. The only light in the kitchen was from the fire on the hearth, and in it, the solicitor looked positively satanic. His dark eyes glittered, cold and hard behind the lenses of his spectacles; his dark hair was slicked back, showing the pointed widow's peak in the center of his forehead, and his long thin face with its high cheekbones betrayed no more emotion than Lauralee's or Carolyn's. He regarded Eleanor as he might have looked at a black beetle he was about to step on.
But Alison gave her a look full of such hatred that Eleanor quailed before it. 'I—' she faltered.
Alison thrust a piece of yellow paper at her. She took it dumbly. She read the words, but they didn't seem to make any sense.
Papa? What was this about Papa? But he was safe, in Headquarters, tending paperwork—
She shook her head violently, half in denial, half in bewilderment. 'Papa—' she began.
But Alison had already turned her attention away towards her solicitor. 'I still say—'
But Locke shook his head. 'She's protected,' he said. 'You can't make her deathly ill—you've tried today, haven't you? And as I warned you, she's got nothing worse than a bit of a headache. That proves that you can't touch her directly with magic, and if she had an—accident— so soon, there would be talk. It isn't the sort of thing that could be covered up.'
'But I can bind her; when I am finished she will never be able to leave the house and grounds,' Alison snarled, her beautiful face contorted with rage, and before Eleanor could make any sense of the words, 'you can't touch her directly with magic' her stepmother had crossed the room and grabbed her by one wrist. 'Hold her!' she barked, and in an instant, the solicitor was beside her, pinioning Eleanor's arms.
Eleanor screamed.