to look at her. The tears ran down her cheeks, and she wept without a grimace; it had a kind of terrible beauty, simply from the power of her passion.
At last Africa knelt down and gently took her hand. She did not hold Florence Ivory in her arms; perhaps the time for that had already been and gone. Instead she looked across the flowered muslin of Florence's skirt at Pitt.
'Such men deserve to die,' she said very quietly and gravely. 'But Florence did not kill him, nor did I. If that is what you came hoping to discover, then your journey has been wasted.'
Pitt knew he should press them now as to where they had been at the times Hamilton and Etheridge had been killed, but he could not bring himself to ask it. He assumed they would swear that they had been here at home in their beds. Where else would a decent woman be at close to midnight? And there was no proving it.
'I hope to find out who did murder both Mr. Etheridge and Sir Lockwood Hamilton, Miss Dowell, but I do not hope it is you. In fact I hope you can show me that it was not.''
'The door is behind you, Mr. Pitt,' Africa replied. 'Please have the courtesy to leave us.'
Pitt arrived home at dusk, and as soon as he was in the door he tried to put the case from his mind. Daniel had had his supper and was ready for bed, it was merely a matter of hugging him good night before Charlotte took him upstairs. But Jemima, being two years older, had privileges and obligations commensurate with her seniority. They were alone in the parlor by the fire. She bent and picked up all the pieces of her jigsaw puzzle, muttering to herself as she did so. Pitt knew immediately that the mess had been left largely by Daniel, and that she was feeling weightily virtuous clearing it up. He watched her small figure, careful to hide his smile, and when she turned round with immeasurable satisfaction at the end, he was perfectly grave. He did not comment:
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discipline was Charlotte's preserve while the children were still so young. He preferred to treat his daughter as a very small friend whom he loved with an intensity and a sweetness that still caught him unaware at times, tightening his throat and quickening his heart.
'I've finished,' she said solemnly.
'Yes, I see,' he replied.
She came over to him and climbed onto his knee as matter-of-factly as she would into a chair, turned herself round, and sat down. Her soft little face was very serious. Her eyes were gray and her brows a finer, child's echo of Charlotte's. He seldom noticed that her hair had the curl and texture of his, only that it was the rich color of her mother's.
'Tell me a story, Papa,'' she requested, although from the way in which she had settled herself and the certainty in her voice, perhaps it was a command,
'What about?'
'Anything.'
He was tired and his imagination exhausted by struggling with the murders of Etheridge and Hamilton. 'Shall I read to you?' he suggested hopefully.
She looked at him with reproach. 'Papa, I can read to myself! Tell me about great ladies-princesses!'
'I don't know anything about princesses.'
'Oh.' Disappointment filled her eyes.
'Well,' he amended hastily, 'only about one.'
She brightened. Obviously one would do.
'Once upon a time there was a princess ...' And he told her what he could remember of the great Queen Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII, who despite much danger and many tribulations finally became monarch of all England. He got so involved in it he did not notice Charlotte standing in the doorway.
Finally, having recalled all he could, he looked at Jemima's rapt face.