have been longing for you,” she said.

Collins came down the street driving a dogcart. He stopped, then hopped down, opened the door, and helped Michelle up. I got in and sat across from her. Since the carriage was open to the air, I could savor the sunny weather. Within five minutes we were out of the village following a country road winding about a pastoral setting.

We entered a forest of gnarled, ancient oaks, their trunks massive, a yard or two across. Many of the leaves were still on the trees, all bronze, russet, or reddish; others had fallen and formed a thick carpet. The air had a moist, fecund smell, a heady odor of fresh earth and rotting leaves. The branches themselves were long and twisted, nearly black. It seemed the kind of forest where Oberon, Titania, and Puck dwelt, where fairies would dance under moonlight. Gradually the trees thinned, the road dropped and curved, and ahead at the summit of a vast expanse of lush green lawn was an enormous house of gray stone.

“Good Lord,” I murmured. “That is where we are going?”

“It has only fifty rooms or so. Somewhere they will find a place to put you. The great hall appears to be something from Ivanhoe.”

I shook my head. “There are those that aspire to great wealth and such houses, but I keep thinking in practical terms of the difficulties in maintaining such a residence.”

Michelle nodded eagerly. “The rooms are cold and drafty. Already I miss our little house and Harriet and Victoria. How are Harriet and Victoria, by the way?”

“They are both well, but they miss you. Victoria wanders about the house yowling pathetically.”

“Poor dear.” She reached out and took my hand. “I am glad you do not wish to be horribly rich. Violet is the first wealthy friend I have had, and I do not envy her.”

I glanced at the back of Collins’ neck. “You would not want your own huge room far from mine, and your own bed?”

She frowned. “Absolutely not!” She smiled and squeezed my hand.

The house was imposing, but melancholy. The gray stone was colorless and forlorn, and the rooms inside were huge—and as Michelle said, cold and drafty. The fire burning at one end of the great hall was large enough for roasting an ox, yet it hardly cut the chill. Somber, uninspired paintings hung from the walls, mostly bucolic pastorals in gaudy antique frames. Portraits of several generations of ancestors would have been more appropriate, but the Wheelwrights were a youthful dynasty. However, before the dining table in the place of prominence was a painting of the elderly Wheelwright and his wife. The artist had the features exactly right, but as there was no hint of malice or avarice, the Wheelwright on canvas appeared to be only some saintly relative of the old scoundrel.

As we crossed the chamber, our footsteps echoed faintly. “Most of the rooms are still closed up,” Michelle said. “There are only about twenty servants here. The rest are coming down early next week with the Lovejoys.”

“I would not expect the Lovejoys.” I tried to keep my voice low, but the room seemed to echo my words. Before we had parted, I had briefly told her what Holmes had revealed about the butler.

Michelle had pulled off her gloves. She gave me a curious look. “No?” One of the maids was nearby polishing the silver. “We shall have to have a talk,” Michelle said.

Collins had left us earlier. I took her hand and kissed her palm. “Talk is not exactly what I had in mind.”

She stroked my cheek and gave me a look, which made it plain that she was of like mind. “We should go see Sherlock and Violet.”

“I suppose so,” I said reluctantly.

She took my hand and led me up the massive stone staircase. “Violet has a knack for finding a comfortable room and appropriating it.”

“This house has some comfortable rooms?”

“Our bedroom is rather nice.”

“Why do you not show it to me?”

Her fingers tightened about mine. “Do not tempt me.”

“Sherlock once told me the afternoon was reserved for loose women and their customers. I told him that he was... ill-informed.”

“Harriet is only too happy to have the afternoon off, but with so many maids...” Her voice was wistful.

Violet’s sitting room did seem different from the rest of the house. It faced south and had been converted to a sunroom, a row of windows letting in the warm autumnal light. A wood fire blazed in the fireplace, and a thick, reddish, patterned carpet covered the cold stone floor. A velvet sofa was against the wall with all the windows, and two matching chairs were close by. Sherlock and Violet were seated at a cherry-wood table, a chessboard between them. Gertrude sat on the sofa embroidering, her white apron and lace cap contrasting with the black dress.

Violet smiled at us. Her color was better, and she wore an electric blue dress with a high collar, no doubt selected to hide the bruises on her throat. Holmes’ brow was furrowed, and he kept his eyes fixed on the chessboard. His heavy tweed suit had a gray herringbone pattern. He was playing black, and he was down to two pawns, a queen, and a rook, while Violet had her queen, two rooks, and a pawn.

“I found this man at the train station, and I thought I would bring him home with me.” Michelle slipped her hand about my arm.

Violet kept smiling, but a faint wariness showed in her dark eyes. “Perhaps he will make some impression on Mr. Holmes, who has been staring at the board for some ten minutes. He would be saving himself some grief if he simply resigned.”

“I never resign.” Holmes slid his rook the length of the board and raised his eyes. “Henry, how good to see you.” His smile was warm. “I trust your time in London was well spent?”

“Very well spent.”

His gray eyes narrowed. “I am eager to hear about it.”

Violet moved her queen. “You did exactly what I wanted. Check.”

Holmes glanced at the board, his smile vanishing. “Blast it! How could I have...?”

Michelle folded her arms. “It is most impolite to play chess when you have guests. You must both be charming now.”

Violet smiled. “Of course you are right, Michelle. Our game can wait. I shall give Mr. Holmes a respite, although I fear it will be of little help.” She stood up.

“Sherlock,” Michelle said sternly.

Reluctantly he turned away from the board. “Oh, very well.”

Violet stepped over to the windows. The view was stunning, the long expanse of lawn and the foliage of the oak forest all golden and glowing from the sinking sun. Her violin lay upon a window seat, and she reached out tentatively and touched it with her white fingers. She was turned from us. Holmes was watching her, an unfamiliar longing in his eyes.

“If you would like to play, that would be nice,” Michelle said.

Violet picked up the violin and the bow. “I would have thought by now that my playing had lost whatever meager charm it possessed.”

Michelle shook her head. “Not at all.” She led me to the sofa. Gertrude started to get up. “Oh, stay put, my dear—there is room for all three of us.”

Gertrude was surprised. “Thank you, ma’am.”

Violet closed her eyes and drew the bow across the strings. The note was like a long, tremulous sigh. Something softened in Violet’s thin face, the tension easing. She had been so weary or ill the last few times I had seen her that I had forgotten what a lovely woman she was. Her fingers were long, delicate, and graceful as they moved across the strings.

Michelle’s beauty was somehow robust and muscular—cheerful, like her. She radiated health, strength and— although this may sound biased—goodness. There was nothing delicate or refined about her, although she was quite pretty. Her skin was very fair, her hair a light brown verging on red. Violet also had fair skin, but her hair was absolutely black, her aquiline nose, brown eyes and full lips strangely exotic. Somehow, despite her beauty, intelligence and strength of character, she remained oddly vulnerable.

She began the Bach partita I had heard her and Sherlock play in London. The instrument did have a warm tone, but that particular afternoon the music had a plaintive, even sorrowful, resonance. Holmes could always close his eyes and be swallowed up by music, but I was too earthbound, too easily distracted. All the same, that day I

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