Fallen Women (33 page)

Read Fallen Women Online

Authors: Sandra Dallas

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: Fallen Women
13.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“So she forgave him?”

“Oh, I couldn’t say. They’d have the worst rows you ever heard. Sometimes they were so loud that Mr. William sent Cook and Louise to run errands. But like I say, him and me knew what it was about. Well, ma’am, you couldn’t blame Mrs. Stanton, now, could you? She was working so hard to get him in the government, and there he was with Miss Lillie. Ungrateful, he was.”

Beret realized her hands were cold, and she rubbed them on the coverlet. “Did my uncle visit my sister at Miss Hettie’s?”

Nellie fidgeted, looking down at the coverlet, then tugging at a loose thread. “How would I know that?”

“But you did know. Jonas told you.”

The maid looked up as if she’d been caught. “I guess you’re pretty smart. Jonas told me, all right.”

“And he told your mistress?”

“Oh, I wouldn’t know, but I’ll tell you one thing. Judge Stanton, he isn’t sleeping in the bed with Mrs. Stanton anymore. I can tell he sleeps on the lounge because that’s where his pillow and a blanket are when I come to make the bed in the morning, and his side of the bed isn’t ever mussed. I expect he’d sleep in another room, except he’s afraid the servants would talk.” She added quickly, “I never told the others about it, even William.”

“I expect he knew.”

“Mr. William always knows.”

“Did he know my sister was pregnant?”

The maid put her hand to her mouth. “Oh, ma’am, that’s a terrible thing.” Nellie burst into tears, covering her face with her hands.

Beret squeezed the girl’s arm and waited until she had taken control of herself. “And who do you think was the father?”

“Any one of them, I expect.”

“Did the men know about the others? Would the judge have known that Lillie entertained other men?” The girl’s answer was important to Beret.

Nellie shrugged. “How was I to know? You don’t think they’d tell me, do you?”

Beret turned to look out her bedroom window. The rain was still coming down, and the branches of the trees dripped with moisture. The room felt stuffy, moldy, and not just from the dampness, she thought. She reached for the maid’s hand and held it a moment. “Now I want you to think carefully and not be afraid to answer me, Nellie.” She paused until the girl looked at her. “Do you think my uncle would have left my aunt for Miss Lillie?”

Nellie thought that over for a long time. “He wouldn’t have gone to Washington, would he? It would be a scandal.” She looked up. “Is that why Jonas killed Miss Lillie?”

“Did Jonas kill her, or was it someone else?”

Nellie’s eyes went wide with shock. “You’re not saying…”

Beret realized she had gone too far. “No, of course not. I’m not saying anything. I was only thinking out loud. I have a hard time accepting Miss Lillie’s death, is all. What you said makes sense. Jonas probably stabbed Miss Lillie, thinking he was helping his mistress.”

“Then why’d he kill those other’n?”

“That’s the question, isn’t it? Maybe he liked killing.”

Nellie thought that over. “If that’s so, do you think he might of killed one of us, I mean me?”

“I can’t answer that, but you don’t have to worry about it now that he’s gone.”

“You really think somebody else killed Miss Lillie?”

Beret could see the fear in the girl’s eyes, and she said quickly, “No. Detective Sergeant McCauley is certain Jonas is the killer, and he knows more about it than I do.”

The two women heard a noise downstairs and turned together toward the door. “My aunt and uncle?” Beret asked.

“I best check,” Nellie said. “You won’t tell—”

“I won’t say a word,” Beret assured her. “And thank you, Nellie. You’ve been a great comfort.”

“That’s all right, miss.” The maid rose and went out, and Beret steeled herself for the hardest confrontation of her life.

 

Chapter 21

“Nellie says you’ve turned your ankle,” Varina said, bustling into Beret’s bedroom.

“She makes too much of it,” Beret replied, trying to sound casual. “I slipped a little on the stair, and Nellie insisted on my lying down on the bed with a pillow under my foot. I’m perfectly fine now.”

“Well, then, come down to the library. I’ve told Nellie to light the stove and fix a kettle of hot water. Since you don’t need it for your foot, your uncle will fix us a toddy. It’s a cold and miserable day. You’ll feel better by the fire.”

For a moment, Beret was tempted to say she would rather rest in bed, but that would only put off what must be done. She placed a shawl around her shoulders, because she was chilled, and not just due to the weather. She slid the envelope into the pocket of her skirt rather than leave it in her room where Nellie might find it, and went downstairs. The library was warm now, bright with the fire the judge had made, and had she not been distressed, Beret would have enjoyed sitting in the cozy room on such an unpleasant day. She watched her uncle mix bourbon and hot water and lemon in a pitcher, sprinkle in a bit of brown sugar, then stir the concoction and pour it into three glasses that were set in silver holders. He handed them around, raised his own, and said, “Here’s to better weather.” Her aunt and uncle drank, but Beret only sipped her toddy.

“How was church?” Beret asked.

“The choir was lovely,” Varina said.

The judge rolled his eyes. “We had a guest preacher. It is my opinion that weak advocates do religion no good. He preached on whether the poor were poor because they were wicked or because they were lazy and refused to work. He concluded both and made no allowance for the man who was born defective.”

“Or for the woman who was married to such a man. I hope Jesus was not so devoid of compassion. I spoke with the reverend afterward and found him a nice enough man for a minister,” Varina said. “We had thought to ask him to join us for luncheon, but Evan Summers said he’d sooner eat with some degenerate bum. I thought that was quite funny, but when I laughed, Evan looked at me strangely, as if he hadn’t intended it as a joke. I am sure Evan has forgotten he was once a member of the lower class.”

“They only live to serve him now. And you know, Varina, the man has no sense of humor,” the judge said. “He was in a foul mood today. I wonder you could have stood him for even half a minute last night, Beret. You’d think with all his money, he’d enjoy life a little.”

“He’d certainly go along with the minister in thinking he is deserving of his wealth, although I do not believe guile and deviousness should be rewarded as they have been with him,” Varina said.

The couple chatted about the church service and the luncheon, which they had taken at Tortoni’s Restaurant. The judge fixed his wife and himself second toddies, but Beret, who had barely touched hers, declined.

“You are very pensive today. What did you do with yourself while we were away?” Varina asked. She seemed in a good mood, and Beret wondered if she had had wine with her luncheon.

“I did not sleep well,” she replied. “For a moment, when I awoke and looked outside, I thought I was in New York. Such weather depresses me.”

“It will quickly pass. Have you eaten?” her aunt inquired.

“A little. Teddy came,” she said abruptly, sorry at once that she had mentioned him, but she wanted desperately to find a topic of conversation to put off discussing the note and the earrings just a little longer.

“The cad. What did he want?” the judge asked.

“I believe he thinks I will take him back.”

“The idea,” Varina said. “I hope you sent him on his way.”

“I did.”

“Good girl,” the judge said. “What else did you do?”

Beret considered him for a long time, but there was no point now in postponing the conversation. “I was going to read in my room, but I remembered the pearl earrings I had borrowed last night, so I returned them. I thought to put them in with your diamonds.” Beret looked up at her aunt as she said that. “But Nellie told me they went with a pearl necklace.”

“She’s right. The large casket is for my diamonds. You needn’t have bothered. I could have put them away myself.” Varina looked unperturbed at her niece’s remarks. “I suppose someday I ought to store them in a bank vault, but I keep them here. Your uncle would like to have a safe installed in the house.”

“You have lovely diamonds. I saw a beautiful champagne diamond ring.”

“Your uncle gave it to me.” Varina studied Beret now before she asked, “You went through my jewelry?”

“No, of course not. I merely saw the ring when I opened the lid.” Beret paused, not sure what to say. “Nellie said you lost two diamond pieces, a brooch and a ring.”

“Yes. Nellie thought the clasp on the one was broken.”

“I don’t think so, Aunt Varina. I found a diamond brooch in the hem of one of Lillie’s dresses and the ring tucked inside her glove. I thought they were my sister’s. But if they are yours, I shall return them at once. Lillie must have borrowed them.”

Varina exchanged a look with her husband and replied, a touch of acid in her voice, “Or was given them.” Her uncle looked away, and Beret pretended not to understand. The judge went to the fire and poked at it, although the fire was burning perfectly well.

Varina smiled at Beret. “Someday all those diamonds will be yours, of course.”

“I…” Beret didn’t know what to say. She had no desire for her aunt’s jewels, as she did not wear such elaborate pieces. More to the point, she had not come to the library to discuss her aunt’s diamonds. “That’s very generous, but—”

“But what? Of course I shall leave them to you. Who else would they go to? I would have left them to both you and Lillie, only…” She let the thought linger.

“Yes,” Beret replied. She put her hand into her pocket and felt the envelope there. She did not want to accost her aunt and uncle. She was agitated and wanted to get the confrontation over with. So she said suddenly, “I found something in your jewel casket, Aunt Varina.”

“Yes.” Varina’s eyes narrowed, and the judge looked up. The room was suddenly still, except for the fire, which crackled as a log split and fell, sending up a shower of sparks. One landed on the Persian rug, and the judge stepped on it.

The two stared at Beret as she stood and went to the fire, holding out her hands to its warmth, although that warmth did not seem to enter her body. She wished desperately that she had not discovered the earrings, that she had waited until her aunt returned to give the borrowed pearl earbobs to her. Beret had loved her sister, had felt obligated to help find her killer, but now, she was sorry for not leaving the investigation of Lillie’s murder up to the police. It was too late, however. She had discovered the earrings, and she had opened the conversation. “I found Lillie’s earrings, the ones taken from her room when she was murdered. They were in your jewelry casket.”

“What!” the judge thundered, while Varina did not move.

It was out now, and Beret could not take it back. “They are Lillie’s.”

“They are clearly a copy,” the judge said, looking at his wife.

“I thought that, too, at first, but I had had one of the diamonds replaced before I gave them to Lillie, so I am sure these are not a copy. I was hoping you had some explanation,” Beret said.

“You are clearly wrong,” the judge told her. “What possessed you to snoop among your aunt’s things?”

“That is not the point. The point is Lillie’s earrings are here in this house. I would like to know how this happened.”

“How could you, Beret?” Varina said, wringing her hands. “You are my own flesh and blood. Michael McCauley has turned you into a shrew. You are so caught up in the evil surrounding Lillie that you suspect even us. I would never have allowed you to come here if I’d known you would accuse us. Your mother would be ashamed of you.”

No, she would be ashamed of someone else in that room, Beret thought but did not say it. Instead, she told her aunt, “Then I shall leave at once, Aunt. But only after you answer my question. What are Lillie’s earrings doing in your dressing room?”

“You’re saying Jonas gave the earrings to your aunt after he killed Lillie?” the judge asked.

“That is one possibility. Another is that he put them there himself.” Beret almost wished her uncle would seize on the latter explanation.

Instead, he asked, “Or are you suggesting someone else in this house is responsible for Lillie’s death?”

“I am saying no such thing, Uncle. I am hoping for a logical explanation.”

The judge hit the floor with the poker. “I am greatly disappointed in you, Beret. There is no wrongdoing here. You have no proof. We treated Lillie like a daughter.”

“No, you did not!” Beret almost spat the words at her uncle, so angry was she at the falsehood. “Would you have written a letter like this to your daughter?” She removed the envelope from her pocket and took out the note, holding it up. The judge blanched as he recognized it and tried to grab it, but Beret would not give it up.

“What is it?” Varina asked.

“Shall I read it?” Beret asked, her eyes boring into her uncle.

The judge looked defiant. “Where did you get that?” Beret didn’t answer, only stared at her uncle. He turned, his back to her, and muttered, “It’s not necessary.”

“What is it?” Varina repeated. She tried to snatch the note away from Beret, but her niece held it out of her aunt’s reach, too.

“Do you want me to tell her?” Beret asked, and when the judge did not reply, Beret said, “I am sorry, Aunt. Will you sit?” Varina slowly lowered herself into a chair and leaned forward. Then Beret said, “This is not easy for me, because I love you both. But Lillie was my sister, and she was ill-used.” Beret took a deep breath. “Uncle John had an affair with Lillie. He is the father of her child, or at least he believes he is. He admits it in this note. He intended to set Lillie up in a little house and live with her there.”

Varina’s face had been placid, curious, but now she was incredulous. “No! That can’t be.” She looked at Beret instead of at her husband. “How could you make up such charges, Beret? You are a cruel young woman. John, tell her it’s not so.”

“You didn’t know, then?” Beret asked.

“It’s all lies.”

“No. Here is the note. Read it for yourself.”

She handed the paper to Varina, who read it slowly, then looked up, her eyes moist. “Is this indeed yours, John?” she asked.

Other books

Swag Bags and Swindlers by Dorothy Howell
The Law of Angels by Cassandra Clark
Europa Strike by Ian Douglas
Luna of Mine by Quinn Loftis
Rock'n Tapestries by Shari Copell
The Accidental Theorist by Krugman, Paul