Copyright (c) 2007 Patricia Ryan. All rights reserved.
An EXCERPT from Book #6 of the Nell Sweeney Mysteries
After returning home with a battle injury,
Will helps Nell to investigate the mysterious death of her long-lost brother in
A
BUCKET OF ASHES
by Patricia Ryan writing as P.B. Ryan
Chapter 1
August 1870: Cape Cod, Massachusetts
"Miseeny, who's that man?" asked breathless little
Gracie Hewitt as she treaded water in Waquoit Bay flanked by the two young
women charged with her care.
"What man, buttercup?"
Nell Sweeney, standing waist-deep in the placid water, followed Gracie's gaze
toward the Hewitts' colossal, cedar-shingled summer "cottage."
Shielding her eyes against the late afternoon sun, she saw a man walking toward
them across the vast stretch of lawn that separated the shore from the house.
Lean and with a graceful gait, he wore a well-tailored cutaway sack coat and
bowler. It wasn't until he removed the bowler and smiled at Nell--that warm,
genial smile she'd once known so well--that she recognized him.
"Oh, my word," Nell
murmured.
"Who is he, then?"
asked Eileen Tierney in her softly girlish brogue.
"He's, um, someone I used to
know when I lived here on the Cape. I haven't seen him for some time."
It had been three years since
Nell, who lived in Boston with the Hewitts except for summers here at
Falconwood, had last crossed paths with Dr. Cyril Greaves. In July of 'sixty-seven,
she had accompanied her employer, Viola Hewitt, to a charity tea in Falmouth,
and he'd been there. Their conversation had been cordial--affectionate, even--but
as if by unspoken agreement, neither had made any move to resume their
acquaintance. Two summers before that, they'd passed each other on Short Street
in Falmouth, he in his all-weather physician's coupe and Nell in her little
Boston chaise, and had chatted for a minute until a salt wagon rumbling up
behind Dr. Greaves had forced him to move on.
For him to actually seek her out
this way was unusual enough to be disconcerting.
"Och, but he's a handsome
fella," whispered Eileen.
"He's married," Nell
said. "And he's older than he seems."
The first time Nell had seen Dr.
Greaves, she was struck by his resemblance to a statue of St. Francis of Assisi
in front of St. Catherine's, her parish church. Born with patrician good looks,
expressive eyes, and that ready smile, he was further blessed by being one of
those lucky men who didn't seem to age much in their middle years. His light
brown hair had but a whisper of gray at the temples, and he still moved like a
man in his twenties.
"Is he nice?" Gracie
panted, switching to a dog paddle to keep up with Nell as she waded toward
shore.
"He is very nice."
"Can I meet him?"
"Can you?"
"May I?" asked
the child with a put-upon roll of the eyes.
"You have met him.
You just don't remember."
"I'd like to meet him again."
Nell paused at the edge of the
bay to wring out the sodden, knee-length skirt of her bathing costume as Dr.
Greaves crossed the sandy stretch of beach. She looked up to find him taking in
her attire--the puffy cap, black wool sailor dress, matching pantaloons, and
lace-up slippers--with a contemplative smile that made her cheeks bloom with
heat.
"Oh, do stop gaping at me,"
she said through a flutter of embarrassed laughter.
"Is that any way to greet an
old friend?"
Old friend. Curious, Nell
thought, that Dr. Greaves should refer to himself that way. Much as they'd
cared for each other, they'd never been friends, precisely; certainly
she'd never thought of them as such.
"And I wasn't gaping,"
he said. "I was admiring." Before Nell could summon a reply to that,
he turned to greet Gracie and Eileen with a bow. "Ladies. So sorry to
intrude upon you unannounced like this, but the butler told me you were out
here, and that I should just come on back."
"Quite right," Nell
said. "Grace Hewitt, Eileen Tierney, may I present Dr. Cyril Greaves, a
physician from East Falmouth." To Dr. Greaves, she said, "Miss
Tierney helps me to look after Gracie, with whom you are already acquainted."
"I'm most pleased to see you
again, Miss Hewitt," said Dr. Greaves.
"And I you," said
Gracie, the consummate little Brahmin lady in her short white bathing dress and
damp braids.
The child's decorous reply drew
an impressed grin from Dr. Greaves. "I must say, that is a much more
mannerly salutation than the red-faced squalls with which you greeted me the
first time we met."
"Dr. Greaves is the
physician who took you out of your mommy's tummy," Nell told Gracie.
"With Miss Sweeney's help,"
he said. "I couldn't have done it without her." A gracious statement,
indeed, for it was he and he alone who had saved both Gracie's life and that of
her mother, a chambermaid named Annie McIntyre, by means of a deft and timely
Cesarean section that storm-ravaged night six years ago. Meeting Nell's gaze,
he said, "I should never have let her go."
Looking up at Nell, eyes wide,
Gracie said, "You were there when I was born?"
She hesitated. Dr. Greaves
winced, evidently realizing he'd just revealed something that Nell, in an
effort to forestall Gracie's incessant questions about her parentage, had kept
to herself. With the cat out of the bag, Nell nodded and said, "I was Dr.
Greaves's assistant for four years. Then, after you arrived and Nana decided to
adopt you, she asked me if I would come to Boston to be your nursery governess."
But not before questioning Dr.
Greaves, in a conversation overheard by Nell, as to her suitability to care for
and tutor a young girl. She's of good character and chaste habits, I take
it? His response had been reassuring, if purposefully vague. There'd been
no hint--thank God, because Nell had desperately wanted the position--of her
disreputable past, nor of the fact that she'd been sharing the lonely doctor's
bed for three of the four years in which she'd lived under his roof.
From a good family, is she?
Mrs. Hewitt had asked him.
They were from the old
country, ma'am. Both gone now, first him and then the mother, when Nell was
just a child.
And there's no other family?
She had a number of younger
siblings--that's how she learned to care for children. Disease took most of
them--cholera, diphtheria--but one brother lived to adulthood. She assumes he's
still alive, but it's been years since she's seen him. James--she calls him
Jamie.
Nell had let out the breath she'd
been holding, weak with relief and gratitude that he hadn't mentioned Duncan.
The rest of it was damning enough, but if Viola had known about Duncan, there
would have been no question of hiring her.
Naturally, Viola had told
Nell when she offered her the position, I would prefer that you remain unwed
while Grace is young, in order to devote your full attention to her. And, of
course, your conduct and reputation must be above reproach--you're responsible
for the upbringing of a young girl, after all. But I can't think you'd let me
down in that regard.
If Nell had managed, these past
six years, to live up to Viola's expectations, it was only by perpetuating a
lie of omission to a woman she'd come to regard as a surrogate mother. As far
as Viola knew--then and now--Miss Nell Sweeney was a virtuous Irish Catholic
girl from a working class background who was good with children. There'd been
so much Nell had been obliged to keep hidden all these years, lest she risk the
loss of her position, her wonderful new life, and most unthinkable of all,
Gracie.
"Miseeny?" Gracie was
tugging at her skirt. "Did you?"
"Did I what, sweetie?"
"Know my mommy? My weal
mommy? Real," she added, correcting herself before Nell could.
"I had never met her before
that night," Nell answered truthfully.
"Did you?" she
asked Dr. Greaves.
He shook his head. "I'm
sorry, no."
Nell said, "Gracie, you know
what Nana says. She'll tell you about your mommy as a birthday present when you
turn twelve."
Although the child was equally
curious about her father, there had been, at his insistence, no such promise to
reveal his identity. Recently Gracie had overheard Mrs. Mott, the housekeeper,
say that she'd been "sired by a Hewitt," and had pressed Nell as to
what that meant. In response, Nell had uttered the only outright lie she'd ever
told the child: "'Sired' means adopted. Mrs. Mott was talking about Nana's
having picked you out special because she'd always wanted a little girl."
Eileen, adept at changing the
subject when it veered down this particular path, said to Dr. Greaves, "You'd
be the one, then, that taught Miss Sweeney nursing."
"More than just nursing,"
Nell said. "He taught me arithmetic, French, history, music,
comportment... I didn't even know how to write a proper letter till Dr. Greaves
got hold of me." He'd been her Pygmalion, she his grateful Galatea.
"Nell had an extraordinarily
quick mind," Dr. Greaves told Eileen. Eyeing the delicate, flaxen-haired
nineteen-year-old with keen interest, he said, "Forgive me, Miss Tierney,
but have we met?"
"I don't figger we could of,
sir. I only been in this country two years, and I never set foot on the Cape
till this summer."
"You look familiar, but
perhaps I'm just confusing you with someone else." Dr. Greaves turned to
Nell. "I, er, wonder if I might have a word with you." He glanced at
Gracie and Eileen. "Perhaps we could take a walk?"
"You go ahead, Miss Sweeney,"
said Eileen. "I'll take Gracie back to the house and get her washed up and
fed."
Nell and Dr. Greaves strolled in
silence along the beach toward a handsome edifice adjacent the Hewitts' private
dock, built half on land and half on stone pilings in the water. Like the
estate's main house, it was cedar-shingled, with slate-roofed gables, a turret,
and a veranda overlooking the bay, from which stairs descended to the dock. The
ground level, which was open to the bay and fitted out with two boat slips,
housed a small sailboat, a rowboat, a canoe, and a pair of sleek shells. Above
that was a guest suite.
"So that's the famous
Falconwood boathouse, eh?" asked Dr. Greaves as they neared it. They say it's
the grandest on the Cape. Mr. Hewitt sails, I take it?"
"Not anymore," said
Nell, knowing that Dr. Greaves hadn't come here to talk about the boathouse,
and wondering why he was stalling; he wasn't the type of man to beat about the
bush. "Martin, the youngest son, takes one of the shells out a couple of
times a day when he's here, as long as the weather's amenable. He's out there
right now."
"Martin, he was the pious
one, yes?"
Nell nodded. "He's a
minister at King's Chapel now. His first sermon was right before I left Boston,
and it was brilliant. I can't remember when I've been so moved."
"A devout Catholic like you,
attending a Unitarian service? That must be good for an extra few eons in
purgatory."
"Actually... I've been
attending services at King's Chapel for some time now."
Dr. Greaves stopped in his tracks
at the side of the house where the dock began. "You're joking."
"Now you really are
gaping at me."
"You? A Protestant?"
"It's a long story."
Dr. Greaves gestured toward the
sixty foot dock, which terminated in a large raised platform set up with
lounging furniture, and offered his arm. "Shall we?" As he escorted
her down the narrow plank walkway, he said, "The other son was more of a
rogue, as I recall. Squirmed out of joining the Army during the war... Henry?"
"Yes, but they call him
Harry, and 'rogue' is a very polite term for what he is. He's not the only
other Hewitt son, though. There's the eldest, William."
"But I thought William died
at Andersonville, during the war, he and the next eldest, Robert. I'm sure that's
what we were told that night we delivered Gracie."
"Robbie died. Will escaped,
but it took him years to reunite with his family." Not that he was ever 'reunited,'
precisely, with the rigid and judgmental August Hewitt, who couldn't bear the
sight of him--or of Nell, for that matter.
"William--he was the one who
earned his medical degree at Edinburgh?"
"Yes, he was brought up with
relatives in England, but he came back here when war was declared and enlisted
in the Union Army as a battle surgeon."
"Did he establish a practice
after the war?"
Nell chose her words carefully,
lest Dr. Greaves conclude, as had August Hewitt, that Will was a reprobate of
the first order. "He hasn't practiced medicine since then--although he
treated Eileen for her clubfoot last year."
"Your assistant? She doesn't
have a clubfoot."
"Not anymore. Will arranged
for a famous orthopedic surgeon from New York to come to Boston and operate on
her."
Dr. Greaves snapped his fingers. "That's
where I know her from. Louis Albert Sayre was the surgeon--brilliant man. I
watched that operation in the surgical theater at Massachusetts General."
Nell was going to say something
about his professional dedication in coming all the way up to Boston from the
Cape when she recalled that he made that trip every week or two to visit his
beloved wife, Charlotte, who'd been a psychiatric patient at Mass General since
well before the war.
"Eileen does wear special,
custom-made boots," Nell said, "but she hardly limps anymore. Will
was very pleased with the outcome."
"If he hasn't been
practicing medicine since the war," Dr. Greaves asked, "what has
he been doing?"
Gambling and weaning himself
off opiates. "He taught medical jurisprudence at Harvard one semester,"
she said. "His closest friend, Isaac Foster, is assistant dean of the
medical school, and he's issued Will a standing offer of a full professorship
so that he can develop a forensics curriculum, but there's a catch. Will would
have to sign a five-year contract, and he's... not comfortable with that kind
of commitment."
"Not comfortable with a full
professorship at Harvard Medical School?" Dr. Greaves asked incredulously.
Stepping up onto the platform,
Nell turned to look out over the water, her arms wrapped around herself. "Will
is a... complicated man. And, too, he'd had another offer. President Grant
wrote him recently, when France and Prussia started mobilizing for war. Our
ambassador to France, Elihu Washburne, was asking for a good field surgeon. The
president had met Will several times during the war, and he came away with a
very high opinion of him."
"A field surgeon? But we're
not allied with France in that war. We're entirely neutral."
"Mr. Washburne isn't, and he's
resolved to remain in Paris and do what he can to aid France, never mind that
it's utter bedlam there now. Will accepted the position."
"Why would any American in
his right mind risk life and limb in a fight that isn't ours, that isn't even
particularly righteous? It's just so much chest-beating between Napoleon and
Wilhelm."
"He had his reasons,"
said Nell, thinking of the letter Will had left on her pillow the night before
he took ship, three and a half weeks ago. You will wonder why I've chosen
this course, rather than the more comfortable alternative of teaching at
Harvard. We have reached a juncture in the path of our acquaintance, you and I,
from whence we cannot continue as before, strolling along side by side with no
particular destination in mind, at least none of which we dare speak....
"Is he to remain in Paris,"
asked Dr. Greaves, "or provide medical service in the field?"
"The latter. Last week he
cabled me from Paris to say that he would be leaving the next day to serve
Napoleon's army." Am to join Marshal MacMahon's I Corps near
Wissembourg on German border and remain with them for duration of war. Unable
to write for some time, perhaps months. Please do not worry, and ask same of
Mother and Martin.
"He cabled you?"
"We've... become friendly
over the past couple of years."
Dr. Greaves was studying her in
that all too insightful way of his. "When is he to return?"
"Not until the war ends. He
told me it could be months from now, or--" Her throat closed up around the
word "years."
"Ah."
"What was it that you wanted
to talk to me about, Dr. Greaves?"
He nodded toward a pair of wicker
rocking chairs. "Let's sit."
She lowered herself into the
chair he held steady for her, and then he turned the other chair to face hers.
He sat forward with his elbows on his knees and expelled a lingering sigh. "A
young woman was brought to me this morning for medical treatment. A girl,
really--nineteen, but a young nineteen. Claire Gilmartin is her name. She lives
with her widowed mother on the outskirts of East Falmouth. They have a little
cranberry farm on Mill Pond. You remember Mill Pond, just to the west of the
village?"
"Of course," said Nell,
rocking absently.
"Claire had grown hoarse and
developed a wheezing cough that morning, with dark sputum. She seemed a bit
mentally confused as well, but that may have just been her way. There was no
mystery as to the cause of her malady. One of their outbuildings--they called
it a cranberry shed--had burned down the night before last, and Claire had been
trapped in it for a little while before she managed to escape."
"This happened, what--thirty-six
hours before, and she'd only just started coughing this morning?"
"The symptoms of smoke
inhalation can take that long to develop. In any event, it appears that a man
unknown to them had gotten caught in the fire and died. Yesterday, when the ashes
and debris were cleared away, his remains were removed and taken to Falmouth
for assessment by the county coroner. According to Mrs. Gilmartin, he was one
of those two men the police have been looking for, the ones who shot that woman
in the beach house."
"I'm sorry," Nell said.
"I don't have any idea what you're talking about. We're really rather
isolated here."
"You don't read the Barnstable
Patriot, I see. Do you get the Boston papers, or do without altogether when
you're summering here?"
"Mr. Hewitt brings the
Boston papers when he comes down for the weekends, but we get the New York
Herald every day, and that's what I've been reading. It comes on the train
from New York. Brady, the Hewitts' driver, goes to Falmouth and gets it."
"Every day? That's almost an
hour's drive each way."
"It's because of the war,
and Will being over there. Mrs. Hewitt wants to keep apprised of all the new
developments--as do I, of course."
"Understandable--as is your
lack of interest in local doings, I suppose, given that you're only here for
summer relaxation. But to those of us who live here year-round, the Cunningham
incident was big news. It happened a couple of weeks ago. Susannah Cunningham
was shot dead by burglars in her home--one of those huge new summer palaces in
Falmouth Heights."
"How awful."
"The burglars got away,
albeit empty-handed, and the Falmouth constabulary has spent the past two weeks
searching for them. There'd been some evidence that they were still in the
area, in hiding."
"One of them in the
Gilmartins' barn," Nell said.
Dr. Greaves nodded. "The
body was identified last night. Mrs. Gilmartin told me his name and said it
would be in the Patriot today. It comes out on Thursdays normally, but
they're issuing an extra. I didn't want you to read about it without being
prepared." Dr. Greaves gentled his voice, his expression bleak. "I
hate to have to tell you this. She said his name was James Murphy."
Nell stopped rocking. She stared
at Dr. Greaves.
"I'm so sorry, Nell."
He reached over to squeeze her hand.
"How... how do they know it
was him if he'd... if he'd been burned? Wouldn't he have been...?"
"I don't know. I only know
what Mrs. Gilmartin told me."
"Are you sure it was Jamie?"
She asked. "Murphy is such a common name. So is James."
"I suppose," he said, but
she could tell he was humoring her. "Have you been in touch with your
brother at all these past...?"
"No, not since he was sent
to prison for robbing that livery driver in 'fifty-nine. The first time I came
to visit him, he told me not to come again, that he didn't want any visitors,
even me. I did come again, but he wouldn't see me. I wrote to him after Duncan
was arrested, to let him know what had happened, and that I was living at your
house, but he never wrote back. Of course, he wasn't much for writing, but I
think he could have managed a short note--something."
"How long was his sentence,
again?"
"Eighteen months. I thought
perhaps he would look me up after he was released, but he didn't. I began to
worry that perhaps he'd been killed by another prisoner, or caught some disease
in there, so I wrote to the superintendent of the Plymouth House of Corrections--remember?
You helped me to compose the letter."
"Oh yes, I remember."
"He wrote back saying that
Jamie had been released in May of 'sixty-one. I never heard from him again. He
was fed up with me and my preaching about how he should live his life. Who
could blame him, especially considering how I was living mine at the time. A
classic case of the pot calling the kettle black." Nell had often wondered,
this past decade, what had become of the ne'er-do-well younger brother who was
her last remaining sibling, the rest having succumbed before they'd made it to
adolescence. Jamie's most likely fate, she'd supposed, would have been another
prison term. She'd thought that was the worst it would come to.
"Nell?"
Nell realized she'd been staring
dully at the opposite shore. She should be crying, she should be consumed with
grief, but she had the most curious sensation of being wrapped in cotton wool.
The brick wall of respectability she'd built around herself since moving to
Boston had served to insulate her from a past tainted by poverty and pestilence
and vice, a past of which Jamie had been an integral part. In the interest of
self-preservation, she'd cultivated an emotional distance from everything she'd
been and done during the first eighteen years of her life, everyone she'd known--even
her own brother. Now, it was as if someone were taking a sledgehammer to that
protective wall, trying to bash a hole in it.
Gripping the arms of her chair,
she went to rise from it, forgetting that it was a rocking chair. It swayed,
and she with it, the blood draining from her head so fast that she nearly
keeled over. No doubt she would have, had Dr. Greaves not caught her up and
eased her back down onto the chair.
"Relax," he said,
pressing gently on her head to lower it. "That's right. Take deep breaths."
"I'm all right," she
said, feeling starved for air. "I just... it's just this blasted heat."
"And this awful news, I
should imagine."
"Yes, of course," she
said.
"We'll stay here till you've
got your bearings," he said, "and then I'll walk you back to the
house."
***
"Do you remember the first
time you saw this house, that night we came here to deliver Gracie?" asked
Dr. Greaves as he escorted Nell by the arm onto the back porch, one of four
ringing the palatial house. She knew that the purpose of his patter, which he'd
kept up during the walk from the beach to the house, was to keep her mind off
Jamie. It was the same trick he used, and had taught her to use, to keep
patients calm. "You called it a castle. You couldn't believe the Hewitts
only spent six weeks a year here."
"You told me it had over
twenty rooms," said Nell, trying to shake off the numb shock that gripped her.
"There are actually forty, if you count the servants' rooms and nurseries
on the third floor."
"Nell?" came a woman's
British inflected voice. "Is that you?"
They entered the vast and opulent
great hall to find Viola Hewitt sitting in her wheelchair, silhouetted by the
sunlight streaming in through the two-story bay window on the back wall.
"Mrs. Hewitt," Nell
said, "do you remember Dr. Greaves?"
"How could I forget?"
Viola wheeled toward them, guiding the chair around a pair of
leather-upholstered settees flanking the monumental fireplace. Between them was
a sheepskin rug on which Gracie's little red poodle, Clancy, lay curled up
asleep. "Our Gracie might not have survived that night without you. How
very lovely to see you again, Dr. Greaves," she said as she extended her
hand.
"The pleasure is all mine. I
must say, Mrs. Hewitt, you've changed very little these past six years. You are
quite as handsome a lady now as you were then."
Idle flattery it may have been,
but it was also the simple truth. The tall, angular Viola Hewitt, with her
silver-threaded black hair and serene eyes, was the most striking woman Nell
had ever met. Of her four sons, the only one who assembled her was Will.
Martin, Harry, and the late Robbie were fair, like their father.
Viola was dressed this afternoon
in one of the flowing, silken tea gowns she favored for daytime wear, her
throat and circled by a hefty turquoise necklace from Mexico that few other
Brahmin matrons would deign to wear. On her lap was the silver mail tray from the
hallstand by the front door, which held an envelope and an unfolded letter.
Will you stay for supper, Dr.
Greaves?" Viola asked.
"I wish I could, but I have
some patients to visit this afternoon, so I must to be on my way."
"You must join us Friday, then.
I'm giving a little dinner to celebrate the return of my son Harry and his new
bride from Europe. They're in Boston now, but they've decided to spend a few
days here with us. Mr. Hewitt will be coming down with them on the train for
the weekend, and my son Martin will still be here. He doesn't have to return to
Boston until Saturday."
"What a kind invitation,
Mrs. Hewitt, " he said. "I believe I would enjoy that, especially if
Nell can join us."
"Why not? Eileen can feed
Gracie her supper that night. And please call me Viola. I'm really not very
keen on formality."
"Then you must call me
Cyril." Turning to Nell with a smile, he said, "Both of you."
Nell wasn't quite sure how to
respond to the implied shift in their acquaintanceship. "I don't know if I
could get used to that. Old habits, you know."
"Do try," he said. "It
would please me."
Nell walked him through the entry
hall and onto the front porch, whereupon he touched her arm, saying quietly, "Are
you going to be all right?"
"It's doesn't seem real. Maybe
it isn't. Maybe it wasn't even Jamie. If only there were some way to find out
for sure."
"I would imagine it was the
police who identified him," he said. "If you'd like, I can take you
to see the Falmouth chief constable tomorrow. He's got jurisdiction over East
Falmouth. You can ask him how he made the identification--if Gracie can spare
you for a few hours."
"Eileen can look after
Gracie. I would like to talk to the constable. It's very kind of you to
offer, Dr. Gr--Cyril."
He smiled. "See? That wasn't
so hard, was it?"
He told her he would come by for
her at ten the next morning, and took his leave.
"I know it may be none of my
affair," said Viola as Nell rejoined her, "but it's clear you're
troubled. Is it anything you'd care to talk about?"
"It's... about my brother
Jamie," Nell said. "Or someone with the same name, but... that's
probably wishful thinking."
Viola looked a little surprised
that Nell had brought up the subject of her brother, as well she might. Nell
never spoke about Jamie, nor had she ever corrected Viola's assumption that
they'd had a falling out years before. How else to explain an estrangement of
eleven years that was due not so much to ill feelings as to Jamie's
disinclination to have anything to do with her? And what was Nell supposed a to
answer, should Viola ask her what her brother did for a living? He's been a
petty criminal since he was a child, mostly sneak thievery, robbing drunks, and
holding up carriages on out-of-the-way roads. And picking pockets, which, as a
matter of fact, happened to be a particular talent of mine.
"Has your brother been in
contact?" Viola asked.
Nell shook her head, looking
down. "He... Dr. Greaves thinks he's been killed. In a fire."
"Oh, my dear." Viola
wheeled closer and grabbed Nell's hand. "Oh, what dreadful news. I am so
terribly, terribly sorry."
"I... I still don't quite
believe it. I don't think I will until I speak to this constable tomorrow."
Folding up the letter in her
hand, Viola said, "This can wait, then."
"What is it?" Nell
asked.
"It's nothing. It's not
important, not now, while you have so much on your mind."
Nell's gaze lit on the envelope
lying faceup on the silver tray. Reading it upside down, she saw that it was
addressed to Mr. and Mrs. August Hewitt in a strained, almost juvenile
hand. Her mouth flew open which he saw the name on the return address: Chas.
A. Skinner.
"That's from Detective
Skinner? Why on earth would he write to you?" asked Nell. "He
barely knows you."
"It's not 'Detective'
anymore, remember? It's not even 'Constable.'"
"Of course. It's just force
of habit to call him that. Loathsome little weasel."
Charlie Skinner, once a member of
the elite but defunct Boston Detectives Bureau, had been downgraded at the
beginning of this year to uniformed patrolman on the weight of his corruption
and myriad misdeeds. Unwilling to accept that this demotion was his own doing--his
type never was--he blamed Nell's friend, State Detective Colin Cook. So
virulent was his hatred of the Irish detective that he plotted to get Cook
convicted of a murder he hadn't committed. The scheme turned against him,
though, thanks in large part to Nell and Will, and last month he was booted off
the force altogether.
"What did he write to you?"
Nell asked.
Choosing her words with evident
care, Viola said, "Mr. Skinner obviously harbors a great deal of anger
toward you for being the instrument of his downfall. It's nothing you need
trouble yourself over during this difficult--"
"Mrs. Hewitt," Nell
said quietly. "Viola. Please."
Viola looked from Nell to the letter,
grim-faced. "Have a seat, my dear," she said, nodding toward the
nearest settee.
"My bathing dress is wet. I
don't want to get--"
"Sit, Nell."
***
Chapter 2
Nell sat, shivering in her damp
swimming clothes. Viola unfolded the letter and handed it to her.
Boston Friday, July 29, 1870
My Dear Sir and Madame,
You will no doubt wonder why I
who am barely aquainted with you have penned this missive. By way of
explanation may I explain that until recentley, which is to say the 9th of
July, I was employed by the City of Boston as a Constable, a fact which is
known to Mrs. Hewitt who may regard me ill but who I pray will credit the
contents of this missive. In the days preceeding my termination I was engaged
in inquiries pursuant to my Constabulary duties, which inquiries were thwarted
hammer and tongs by the ill-advised labors of the Irish female who you employ
as a governess, in concequence of which I was as I say relieved of my duties.
As I am led to understand that
you hold the highest regard for Miss Sweeney, who is no "miss" as I
shall explain--
Looking up sharply, Nell saw
Viola sitting in front of the bay window with her back to the room, gazing out
onto the exquisitely landscaped north lawn and the bay to the east. Nell
returned her attention to the letter, her hands shaking so badly that she could
barely focus on the words.
As I am led to understand that
you hold the highest regard for Miss Sweeney, who is no "miss" as I
shall explain, it falls to me as a man of rectitude who is vexed to see good
folks such as yourselves gulled by a cunning Colleen to inform you that "Miss"
Sweeney is in no way what she appears to be. On the 8th of July in the course
of my afore-mentioned duties I had ocassion to observe "Miss" Sweeney
leave your home on Tremont St. and hire a hackney coach, her uneasy manner
arousing my intrest to the degree that I followed her at a distance in my gig
North across the river to Charlestown.
The hack proceeded to
Charlestown State Prison, the driver waiting outside the gate as "Miss"
Sweeney entered the Prison where she remained from one o'clock in the afternoon
until half passed that hour. When she came out and got back in the hack I could
not help but notice that her color was high and her atire unkempt withal. Which
is to say her hat being crooked and a fair degree of dust besmirching the back
of her dress.
You can imagine my cogitations
as to what such a visit might betoken. Upon finding myself two days thence in
posession of considerable free time I set about making inquiries as to the
nature of that visit. Such inquiries being hindered by my being sacked and the
stain upon my repute it took me some time to sort things out. But at length I
became privy to the truth, which is that "Miss" Sweeney is MRS.
Sweeney wife of Duncan Sweeney inmate at Charlestown State Prison these 10
years passed with 20 more years to serve for the crimes of armed robbery and
aggravated assault.
Knowing that good folks such
as yourselves could not and would not countenance such bald DECIET I took pen
to paper so that you might know how you have been hoodwinked and act
accordingly, which is to say sack MRS. Sweeney with all haste. I warrant she is
as Bad an Apple as ever washed up on our shores.
Ever most faithfully yours,
Chas. A. Skinner
Nell lowered the letter, sweat
beading coldly on her face. Please, St. Dismas. Please don't let this
happen. I can't lose her. I can't lose Gracie.
She pressed a hand to her stomach
as it pitched, launching a surge of bile into her throat. "Oh, God."
Bolting up from the settee, she
raced through the buttery and down the service hallway to the little bathroom
off the laundry room, hunched over the water closet, and emptied her stomach.
She flushed, rinsed out her mouth, and surveyed herself in the toilet glass. Her
face was waxen, her eyes panicky. She whipped the absurd bathing cap off her
head, and with palsied hands smoothed down her hair, plaited into a single,
still damp, rusty brown braid.
"God, help me," she
whispered, and walked back to the great hall on legs that felt as if they were
made of India rubber.
Viola was sitting with the letter
in her hand, watching Nell gravely; Clancy, sitting next to her, bore a similar
expression. "Are you quite all right?"
Nell nodded, although, of course,
she was anything but. "It's the heat," she said dully as she wiped
her forehead with the back of her arm. "This blasted heat."
"And this letter, I should
think. From your reaction... It's true, I take it."
Nell sank to her knees in front
of Viola, her strength utterly sapped by the double volley of bad news in such
a brief period of time. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Hewitt," she said in a
watery voice. "I'm sorry. I... I never meant to deceive you. That is, I
never wanted to. I hated it, I always hated it. But I just... I knew I couldn't
be Gracie's governess if I was married, especially to a... to someone like
Duncan."
"Does Will know?" Viola
asked. All she knew about Nell and Will was that they'd developed a friendship
based on common interests, not the least of which was Gracie. When people had
started whispering about the amount of time they were spending together, they
pretended to be engaged in order to protect Nell's reputation. Viola knew about
the bogus engagement, as did her husband.
"He knows," Nell said. "And
Dr. Greaves. And, of course, Father Gannon at St. Stephen's. And Father
Donnelly at St. Catherine's in East Falmouth. He was my confessor before I
moved to Boston. No one other than them."
Viola sat back in her chair,
nodding pensively, her gaze on the letter.
"Mrs. Hewitt..." Nell
said, swallowing down the urge to burst into tears. Viola, with her classic
British restraint, disdained emotional outbursts. "Gracie means everything
to me. I couldn't give her up. I'd rather die."
Viola stared at Nell, and then
her expression softened, and she said, "Oh, Nell. Oh, my dear."
Leaning down, she stroked Nell's cheek with her cool, soft hand. "You
think I'm going to dismiss you? How poorly you know me."
"But... Mr. Hewitt, when he
reads that letter..."
Through a little gust of laughter,
Viola said, "Mr. Hewitt is never going to read this letter."
She spun her chair around,
plucked a match safe off a console table, and wheeled over to the fireplace.
Scraping aside the summer screen of stained glass, she tossed the letter and
envelope onto the empty grate, lit a match, and threw it in. Within about two
minutes, all that was left of Charlie Skinner's damning "missive"
were some flakes of black, papery ash.
"Here, let me get that,"
Nell said as Viola went to replace the heavy screen. Pulling it back over the
hearth, she said, "I... I don't know how to thank you, Mrs. Hewitt. I am
sorry for having misled you, dreadfully sorry."
"Well, I mean, obviously I
would have preferred that you'd been candid with me, but looking back, it wasn't
really outright deception. I assumed from the beginning that you were unwed.
You simply never corrected me."
"You're being generous, Mrs.
Hewitt. I did call myself Miss Sweeney. I'd stopped calling myself 'Mrs.'
ever since Duncan... well, ever since he went to prison. I've worried for six
years about what would happen if it became known that I was married to a
convict. I'm truly humbled by your kindness and your understanding."
"Do sit down, my dear. You're
so very pale."
Mindful of her damp clothes, Nell
sat on the edge of the hearth.
"I ought to be
understanding," Viola said. "I've a skeleton rattling 'round in my
own closet, after all."
Nell was one of two people, Mr.
Hewitt being the other, who knew that at the time of the Hewitts' wedding,
Viola was some five months pregnant by the French painter Emil Touchette.
During a calculatedly lengthy European honeymoon, Viola gave birth to Will,
whom August had never been able to accept as his own, despite his well-meaning
assurances to that effect when he proposed to Viola.
"But to be quite frank,"
Viola continued, "had I known about Duncan six years ago, I can't say it
wouldn't have given me pause, not just because your husband was in prison, but
because you had a husband. I was concerned about your attention being
divided while Gracie was young. As it turned out," she said with a wry
smile, "your husband's imprisonment ensured that you were able to devote
yourself fully to Gracie."
"I love her as if she were
my own. For the longest time, I thought I'd never..." Careful.
Viola was tolerant and indulgent, remarkably so, but there would be a limit to
how much even she could accept. "I thought I'd never have a child to love
and care for, but now I have Gracie, as she means the world to me."
"You needn't discuss this if
you don't want to," Viola said. "It's really none of my affair, after
all, but I can't help but wonder why a fine young woman such as yourself would,
well..."
"Get involved with the
criminal?" With a cheerless smile, Nell said, "Don't think I haven't
asked myself that same question many times. The thing is, I didn't realize what
he was when I first met him. My... my brother Jamie introduced us. He brought
Duncan around to the poor house to meet me, and--"
"Poor house?" said
Viola, obviously aghast.
Nell lowered her gaze to her
hands, twisting the hem of her bathing dress as if to wring it out. "The
Barnstable County Poor House. I hadn't wanted you to know. I felt... well, I
was ashamed, of course, but I was also worried that if you knew how I'd grown
up, you'd consider me unsuitable to be a governess."
"I don't judge people by
their backgrounds, but by who they are--though I must say, you're having turned
out so well after enduring such an upbringing speaks well for your character.
Did you live there for your entire childhood?"
Nell shook her head. "Only
from the age of eleven. Before that, I lived in East Falmouth. My father was a
day laborer on the docks, when he was working. But he was a drunk, and he
abandoned us. A year later my mother died of cholera, along with one of my
sisters and two of my brothers."
"Oh, Nell."
"Another sister had died
three years before--some lung ailment, I'm not really sure what it was. So that
left Jamie and Tess and me. Jamie was a year and a half younger than I, and
Tess was just an infant, a newborn. We were sent to the poor house, which
was..." Nell shook her head, her eyes closed. "You can't imagine."
"I've done charity work in
those places, remember? I can imagine all too well."
"At least I had Tess to take
care of, and that gave me the sense that God had a plan for me, that I wasn't
just a charity case, that I was doing something worthwhile. She was the
sweetest little thing, Tess, with big, dark eyes, just like Gracie. But, um..."
Nell took a deep, shaky breath. "She died of diphtheria when she was just
shy of her fourth birthday."
Viola closed her eyes with a
pained expression.
Nell looked away from her so as
to stifle her urge to weep. "Jamie ran off then, said he had enough of
being a ward of the state, and that he was going to make his own way from now
on, never mind he was just twelve. I was tempted to leave, too, but a girl my
age on her own... I'd seen enough unwed mothers come and go through those doors
to know how it would have turned out."
"A wise decision, I should
think. The better of two evils."
"Jamie used to sneak back in
to visit me, and one day a couple of years later, when I was sixteen, he
brought Duncan, who was eighteen at the time. I was at a low point then,
despondent, listless. I had been ever since I lost Tess, because I blamed
myself for not having been able to save her. Duncan... he was like this shining
god, beautiful, charming, utterly magnetic. He made me feel beautiful.
He made me feel worthwhile. And he gave me a way to escape from the poor house
without ending up walking the streets. He asked me to marry him just a month
and a half after meeting me. I was thrilled. I thought my trials were over,"
she said, a bitter edge creeping into her voice.
"I take it he wasn't the
savior you'd thought he would be."
"He wasn't--isn't--a
monster, but he was just a small-time thief, like Jamie." And like her,
eventually, though it had been Duncan who'd coerced her into it. "And he
was an ugly drunk, very ugly."
It was clear from Viola's
expression that she knew what Nell meant by that.
"We'd been married about two
years when I found out he'd robbed a jewelry store at gunpoint and brutalized
the owner, and that the police were looking for him. I'd had enough. I told him
I was leaving him. He... he attacked me, savagely. He used a knife on me."
Viola flinched. "That little
scar near your eyebrow..."
"That's the least of it. The
rest are in places no one can see." Except for Will, who'd seen them for
the first time that night before he left for France last month. Stay,
she'd whispered as he'd lain in her bed, having come there to soothe her
despair, and his, over his imminent departure for a war that might keep them
apart for years, or even forever.
He hesitated, knowing, as Nell
did, that this would be opening a door that could never be closed. But then he
crushed her to him with trembling arms, and it was so painfully sweet, so
fierce, so tender, so perfect, that the very memory of it made her heart quiver
in her chest, her eyes sting hotly.
Bloody hell, he'd said as
he lowered her night shift off her left shoulder, revealing the nine-inch scar
that crawled in a pale ribbon from the outer edge of her collarbone down the
side of her breast. Touching his lips to it, he'd whispered, I wish to God I'd
met you before he did. I wish... I wish...
I know. Me, too.
"If you don't mind my saying
so," Viola said, Duncan sounds like a monster, having done that to
you."
"And yet he also made a very
noble sacrifice once that probably saved my life. But as grateful as I am for
that, I can never forget what he took from me. You see, I was with child when
Duncan... did that to me. I miscarried. It was an incomplete miscarriage, but I
didn't realize that until I was reeling with fever from the infection. My
landlady brought me to Dr. Greaves. He saved my life and took me in. I owe him
a great deal."
Nell considered and swiftly
rejected the notion of admitting to Viola the full extent of her relationship
with Cyril Greaves. Gratitude had drawn her to his bed the first time, but
after that it had been about other things--comfort, affection, their mutual
loneliness. Although of different religions, they'd shared the same values,
including a respect for the sanctity of marital vows--ironic, given that they
were both married, albeit to spouses with whom they knew they would never again
cohabit. During the three years they'd slept together, Nell had refused, on
religious grounds, to let him use a French letter, despite which she had never
conceived. She'd taken this as proof--they both had--that she'd been rendered
barren by the infection that had ravaged her after the miscarriage.
"I like Cyril," Viola
said.
"He's a very likable man."
"Duncan was convicted and
sent to prison, I take it?"
"For thirty years."
"I don't suppose you've
considered divorce. Even with the stigma, it strikes me as a more acceptable
prospect than spending the rest of your life bound in wedlock to someone like
that."
"When I was a practicing
Catholic," Nell said, "it was a futile option. The only reason to
divorce Duncan would have been to remarry, and if I'd done that, I would have
been excommunicated."
"But now?" Viola said.
"I went to speak to Duncan
last month. That was the purpose of my trip to the prison, the one Skinner
wrote about. I told Duncan I wanted a divorce, and he flew into a rage. He says
I'm all he's got, and that a marriage in the Church can never be undone. He
threatened to write to you and Mr. Hewitt and tell you about our marriage if I
went forward with the divorce. I was afraid if he did that, Mr. Hewitt would
insist on dismissing me even if you felt otherwise. In a choice between getting
that divorce and losing Gracie... well, I had no choice."
"Right, well, it would
appear that Mr. Skinner has beaten Duncan to the punch as regards the tell-all
letter, and as you can see, your position with us is in no jeopardy."
"Only because you happened
to see Skinner's letter before Mr. Hewitt did. If Duncan writes, who's to say--"
"I shall make an effort to
get to the mail before Mr. Hewitt does. It shouldn't be too difficult, even
after we return to Boston--he's at India Wharf or the mill six days a week. So
you see?" Viola spread her hands, smiling. "There's nothing to stop
you petitioning for a divorce, if that's what you really want."
"It is," she said. "Desperately.
I know it's a grueling and expensive process, but I'll do whatever I have to
do. And I've saved a good deal of money over the years. I'm hopeful it will be
enough to--"
"I'll pay for it,"
Viola said with a careless wave of her hand. "You shouldn't have to--"
"I'm paying for it, Mrs.
Hewitt. It's a kind offer, but I think you've done enough for me, and I have
quite a bit saved up, almost five thousand dollars."
With a startled little laugh,
Viola said, "How on earth did you manage to put away that much?"
"Given that I don't have to
pay for housing or food, it really wasn't very difficult. I'm not in the habit
of spending money, so I just put it in the bank instead, and let it earn
interest. Do you think five thousand will cover the legal fees?"
"I should certainly hope so.
As for it being a grueling process, you're right, it can take a very long time
and a great deal of effort--or not. Do you recall my friend Libby Wentworth
from church? She was granted her divorce decree within days of filing the
petition."
"Within days?"
"It should come as no
surprise to you that in the matter of divorce, as in so many other things,
wealth and influence can go far toward smoothing the way. There are strings
that can be pulled, corners that can be cut..."
"Money that can change
hands?"
"Would you balk at that?"
"No." Nell had far too
much at stake to indulge in such qualms.
Viola said, "Libby was
represented by our mutual friend Silas Mead. Silas is one of the most powerful
lawyers in Boston. They call him The Magician. I seem to recall that he and his
wife have expressed an interest in this area of the Cape, what with it becoming
such a fashionable summer destination now that one can get here by train. Why
don't I invite them to spend this weekend with us? They can come down on the
Friday train with August and Harry and Cecilia. I'll ask Silas to be prepared
to meet with the two of us on a confidential legal matter."
"That would be wonderful,"
Nell said. "But if Mr. Hewitt were to find out why you invited them..."
"Silas is nothing if not discreet.
If I ask him not to mention it to Mr. Hewitt, he won't. Meanwhile, I don't want
you fretting about all this. You've lost your brother. That's enough of a
burden. And I want you taking care of yourself. You've been looking so wan
lately, and I know it's not just the heat. I think it's because you haven't
been eating enough. I know you can't be trying to lose weight, a slender thing
like you."
"Hardly. I just haven't had
much of an appetite lately."
"That can happen in the
summer."
Or in the initial weeks of pregnancy, thought Nell.