be between you. I shouldn’t bother if I were you. He’s more interested in flirting with my vapid sister.”
“How dare you?” Anger flashed hot through me and I balled my hands into hard fists.
“This is not your house, and my family’s concerns are none of your business. I suggest—strongly—that you leave before you come to understand too well exactly what this place, what these people can do to someone who’s fallen out of their favor. I suspect you’re not quite so strong as you’d like everyone to believe. So take your leave before it’s too late.” He spat the last words as he dragged me by the wrist to the staircase. “It would be best if you were gone before morning.”
22
“What happened?” I asked.
“There is so much—I must consider where to start. This visit, Emily, is making me crave your favorite, port. Champagne does not want to be in this house.”
I nearly fell out of my seat. “I didn’t know such a thing was possible.”
“Nor did I and I am filled with dread and horror.”
“You must tell me what happened!”
“First, Dominique is exhibiting behavior most alarming. She told me that she’s growing concerned about you—that you remind her so much of her daughter in the days before she fell ill.”
“There’s nothing wrong with me!”
“Why on earth would she do such a thing? Even if she did have reason to think I was going mad?”
“It’s a ruse,
“Madame Prier can’t hurt me, even if she’d like Laurent to scare me off.” I told her what had happened in the attic.
“Ridiculous,” she said. “But you must have been terrified. Don’t try to deny it—you’re still pale. What do you hope to find here?”
“Anything Edith’s written,” I said. “Diaries, letters, whatever there is.”
“Those won’t lead us to the child. I think it’s time to enlist the further help of Monsieur Leblanc. He may have journalistic contacts who could offer assistance.”
I nodded. “An excellent suggestion, Cécile. But I must ask if you’d be so keen to reconnect with him if he weren’t so handsome?”
She shrugged. “I wouldn’t say
“I shall get in touch with him first thing tomorrow morning,” I said as the door swung open and Colin strode into the room.
“How pleasant to find you both here,” he said. He kissed Cécile’s hand and my cheek. “Reminds me of long-ago afternoons in your library at Berkeley Square.” The house where I’d lived with my first husband proved an excellent place for me in the years following his death, and Colin and I had spent many happy hours in the library there.
“Those were lovely days,” I said.
“Idyllic,” he said.
“Did you find Monsieur Prier?” I asked.
“I did indeed,” Colin said. He pulled a flask of whisky from his jacket and poured a single finger into both of the glasses on the table near our fireplace. Cécile relieved him of one of them at once and he took a swig from the other before handing it to me. “He spends his evenings happily ensconced with his mistress and her daughter. They live not half a mile from this house.”
“How old is the daughter?” I asked.
“Just the right age to be the child whose presence has tormented you.”
“Did you confront the father?”
“The
“It is not, Monsieur Hargreaves, uncommon to find men in such situations,” Cécile said. “Do tell me you’re not naïve enough to believe otherwise.”
“No, no,” Colin said, sipping quickly from his flask. “It was his brazen attitude that surprised me. His wife knows about the child.”
“And what does she think?” I asked.
“She ignores the situation except at Christmas when she sends a heap of presents to the girl.”
“Extraordinary behavior for a spurned wife.” I drained my whisky, cringing as it stung my throat.
“Not extraordinary in the least for a doting
I dropped my head into my hands, almost laughing. “No—”
“It’s possible,” Colin said.
“Think on it, Emily—the doctor would have felt no compunction whatsoever at turning the baby over to Prier.”
“It’s far too convenient,” I said.
“Not every question has a complicated, interesting solution,” he said.
“Kallista, you’re coming over all rational,” Cécile said. “I’m not sure I like it.”
“I wish I could say I’d always been rational, but you both seem amused enough already. I have, however, learned something in these past years. The answer might not be complicated or interesting or even seemingly significant, but it’s almost never so easy. Can we interview the mistress? Her friends? It’s a pity there’s no way to prove whether she’s the baby’s mother.”
“Diverting though this speculation is, I must confess to having tested Monsieur Prier’s knowledge of Edith’s condition as obliquely as I could,” Colin said. “He didn’t say anything extraordinary, and certainly nothing that suggested he was aware of being a grandfather. I think we must assume the mistress’s child is, in fact, his.”
I couldn’t argue, but it felt all wrong. I had to find out what happened to Edith’s daughter.
The following morning, long before Cécile was awake, Colin and I set off to see Monsieur Leblanc, who had taken a room at a nearby tavern. Cécile, perhaps bent on proving she had no interest in the writer, had decided the night before not to join us. The tavern was a lively place, crowded from the moment it opened, its patrons friendly and open, engaged in each other’s lives. We inquired after our friend, and were directed to a pretty serving girl who went upstairs to alert him of our arrival.
“I have been productive,
“The Markhams?” I asked; he nodded and sat next to my husband.
“Madame Prier is of the same generation as Madeline’s mother,” he said. “They’re faraway cousins.”
“Which makes Madeline and Edith…” I stumbled over the genealogy.