“Was it usual, do you know, for the children to leave the bathroom door unlocked when they had a bath? I know it is sometimes done.”
“I couldn’t say about the boarders, madam. Us orphans never lock the door, but it’s different in the Orphanage from here. It’s all our own place. There’s no strangers.”
“Now, Annie, one more thing. You say that Miss Bonnet asked you to go for help. Why didn’t you do as she told you, instead of shouting for Bessie?”
“Miss Bonnet clutched a-hold on me and said, ‘Don’t go! Don’t leave me, Annie! There will have to be witnesses of this!’ ”
“What did she mean? Do you know?”
“I think she was just took a-back, madam, finding the little girl dead.”
“Did you see the dead girl?”
“Well, yes. She looked kind of peaceful, in a way. But her head was right under the water, and I never see such a lovely colour on anybody.”
“What colour was she, then?”
“Ever so pink. I only ever saw one other dead person, and they was as white as death. That’s what you say, madam, ain’t it?—as white as death.”
“Quite right, Annie. Go on.”
“Yes, well, she wasn’t, see? And her little eyes shut, and her little mouth just a bit open, as though she might be asleep. I don’t think she
“So you don’t believe in the suicide theory, Annie?”
“What, kill herself? That little dear? Oh, madam, I’m certain she never. It must have been an accident. She could never have looked so peaceful, lying in mortal sin.”
“Perhaps not. Thank you, Annie. And you heard Miss Bonnet close the window?”
“
Mrs. Bradley stepped on to the landing and apologised to the nuns for keeping them waiting.
chapter 6
nuns
“
john lydgate: Let devoute peple kepe observance.
« ^ »
I want to know all the details,” said Mrs. Bradley. Mother Ambrose, buxom, black-browed and tall, her meek habit declining to look, upon her, anything but militant, gazed straight ahead without a glance for little, apple- cheeked, dimple-chinned Mother Jude, and then said in a deep voice resonant as an organ:
“Bessie came to me in the ironing-room and asked me to go over to the guest-house immediately. I rebuked her for her state of mind, which seemed to me an unnecessarily excited one, and then hastened to this landing with her. When I discovered what had happened I sent Bessie off again for Sister Saint Jude.”
“You say ‘when I discovered what had happened.’ What did you think had happened?”
“I could see that the child was dead.”
“You felt certain of that?”
“Yes. Illogically, however, I bent over the water and raised the child’s head.”
“Was the head completely submerged when you saw the child first?”
“Yes, indeed. The water was very deep—almost up to the top of the bath.”
“What was the temperature of the water?”
“I could not say, except that it was quite cold.”
“When you say that—?”
“I mean that it was a shock to me when I plunged my hands into the cold water. I suppose I had taken it for granted, subconsciously, that the water would be warm.”
“Yes… thank you.”
“Sister Saint Jude arrived very soon after I had sent for her,” Mother Ambrose continued, “and came into the bathroom. She said: ‘Oh, poor little Ursula!’ Then we lifted the child out of the water and I had to call to the two