something to do with that madman. A twitching sort of person, and always off upon what he is
“When shall Lady Harriett return?” asked Byron.
“Her ladyship did not, ah, shall we say, trouble herself to tell me what is surely none of my concern. She has instructed me to marry you to Mr. Olson upon his arrival, whether she is here or no.”
Byron looked at the food and then at Lucy, and she nodded. She did not much feel like eating, but she required strength and did not wish to find herself in a dire situation too depleted to do what she must.
Lucy served herself a healthy portion of eggs and toast—the meat did not appeal to her today—and sat at the table as far from Mr. Buckles as she could while still able to conduct a conversation. Byron, for his part, put but little food on his plate—some sausage and porridge. Lucy sensed that, for a man of great appetites, he was an abstemious eater.
“How does my sister?” Lucy asked Mr. Buckles.
Mr. Buckles put a large piece of bacon into his mouth. “She is well.”
“And your daughter?”
He paused for but a second. “She is also well.”
“You know that for certain?” asked Lucy.
He smiled in his simpering way. “How should I not, ah, know?”
“How indeed?” asked Lucy. She drank a glass of water. She wanted neither hunger nor thirst to inhibit her in the time ahead.
“I must tell you,” Mr. Buckles said, “how, let us say—I believe the word is
He went on in this manner for some time, permitting neither his chewing nor the repetitive nature of his subject to interfere with his discourses. As this conversation required not a word from anyone else, Lucy allowed him to proceed as he pleased until she was done eating. She then set down her utensils, pushed back her chair, and walked over to Mr. Buckles. Taking a deep breath, she raised up her hand and struck him across the cheek as hard as she could. She had not the power of Lady Harriett, and Mr. Buckles did not fly from his chair as he might have done in her imagination, but even so, the sound rang out with a reverberating crack, and Lucy could not be dissatisfied. Her own hand stung from the force of it, but she cared nothing for that.
Mr. Buckles remained motionless, tears in his eyes. He looked utterly bewildered, like a little boy who has discovered his father kissing the kitchen maid, and suddenly sees that the world is not what he has always believed it.
Lucy turned to Byron. “Be so good as to restrain this man.”
He rose and did as she asked. He stood behind Mr. Buckles, holding his arms so that they were pinned behind the chair. “If Lady Harriett’s creatures should choose to interfere,” Byron said, “I may not be able to do as you ask.”
“Lady Harriett said we have freedom of the house,” said Lucy. “Let us use it.”
Mr. Buckles was beginning to find his voice. “How dare you!” he thundered. “How dare you lay hands upon me and restrain me. Do not think that Lady Harriett Dyer will not punish you most severely.”
Lucy struck him again. It hurt her far more this time, for her hand was now quite tender. What ought she to feel in striking her sister’s husband, the man who had cheated her out of her inheritance, out of the life that should have been hers? Shame? Rage? Revenge? She felt none of these things, only a hard resolve.
“Mr. Buckles,” she said, “be so good as to remain quiet until I ask you to speak. You are in the service of a monster, but you are far worse, for you would sacrifice your own child for your mistress. You disgust me, sir, and I have not the time to visit upon you the punishment you deserve for defrauding me of my inheritance. For now, I wish to know where I can find my niece.”
“I am instructed to tell you nothing, and I will tell you nothing,” he answered.
Lucy reached forward and began to unknot Mr. Buckles’s cravat. He look at her in shock, and Byron cocked an eyebrow in curiosity, but she would not pause to explain. Once the cravat was gone, she unbuttoned his vest, took the top of his shirt in each hand and ripped it open, exposing his pale, flabby chest, hairless and slick with perspiration.
“Stop this!” cried Mr. Buckles.
Lucy felt as though she stood outside herself. Never before had she done anything so audacious. Never before had she violated the bounds of decency with such determination and disregard. In this place, at this time, propriety did not matter. Lucy would do what she must, would do what she liked, to save her niece, and she would take the consequences as they came.
She reached over to the center of the table and pulled from the vase a single bluebell, just as she had seen in the pages of the
Byron leaned back the chair and Lucy showed Mr. Buckles the object in her hand.
“What do you do with that flower?” he asked with a horror perhaps inconsistent with Lucy’s instrument.
“It is a bluebell,” she said. “They grow near graves, you know. My father taught me that. And there is no greater truth than death. The bluebell, when used properly, will render you incapable of lying or withholding what I ask of you. The only difficulty is that it must be held over your heart, and I am not altogether certain you have one.”
“How did you learn such things?” Mr. Buckles demanded.
“I learned them from the
Mr. Buckles let out a shriek, like a frightened child. Then he swallowed hard and attempted to blink the moisture from his eyes. “I’ll tell you nothing,” he croaked.
“Let us find out.” She slapped the flower upon his chest and, losing herself in the process, moved the bluebell in a circle until the petals began to crumple and ball. She absented herself, muttering she hardly knew what, but words the pages of the
At last, she came back to herself. “Now will you tell me what I wish to know?”
He opened his mouth and moved it back and forth. His jaw vibrated, his lips quivered. Then he spoke, his voice low and forced. “Yes.”
She smiled. “Much better, Mr. Buckles. Let us discover all your secrets.”
27
There was not much time, Byron was certainly correct in that, and there were so many questions that needed asking, but only one that mattered. “You may lower the chair, Lord Byron.” When he had done so, she looked at Mr. Buckles. “Where is your daughter?”
He did not hesitate before responding. “I do not know.”
“Then Lady Harriett did not take her, has nothing to do with her disappearance?”
“No.”
“But you knew she was gone, that she had been replaced?”
He paused for a moment. “Yes, of course I knew.”
“Does Martha know?”
“No.”
Lucy sucked in her breath.
“Do you know who took Emily?”
“One of Lady Harriett’s rivals. That is all I know.”
“And why? What did this rival want?”