Format: E-Galley, 336 pages
Release Date: October 2, 2018
Publisher: Berkley
Source: Publisher
Genre: Mystery & Detective / Historical
Charlotte Holmes, Lady Sherlock, returns in the Victorian-set mystery series from the USA Today bestselling author of A Conspiracy in Belgravia and A Study in Scarlet Women, an NPR Best Book of 2016.
Under the cover of “Sherlock Holmes, consulting detective,” Charlotte Holmes puts her extraordinary powers of deduction to good use. Aided by the capable Mrs. Watson, Charlotte draws those in need to her and makes it her business to know what other people don’t.
Moriarty’s shadow looms large. First, Charlotte’s half brother disappears. Then, Lady Ingram, the estranged wife of Charlotte’s close friend Lord Ingram, turns up dead on his estate. And all signs point to Lord Ingram as the murderer.
With Scotland Yard closing in, Charlotte goes under disguise to seek out the truth. But uncovering the truth could mean getting too close to Lord Ingram—and a number of malevolent forces…
Story Locale: Victorian England
The Hollow of Fear, by author Sherry Thomas, is the third installment in the author's Lady Sherlock series. Charlotte Holmes is the main protagonist of this series. Since her intentional fall from grace, she has taken the mantel of Sherlock Holmes, the only consulting detective around. Her partner in crime is Mrs. John Watson who was good enough to take Charlotte in when everyone turned against her. Since her reputation is presumably ruined for good, Charlotte can't actually do any investigations as her self.
This would be a great time to explain that this series must be read in order. I also will say that the events of this books, definitely ties into what happened in A Conspiracy in Belgravia. Previously, Charlotte discovered that her friend Lord
Ingram’s estranged wife was an agent of Moriarty and therefore a traitor to the Crown for which Lord Ingram
is an agent. Since then, nobody has seen Lady Ingram.
That is until a corpse turns up at Lord Ingram's house after a serious of curious events which leads to an entire household of unexpected guests, including Olivia (Livia) Holmes. Pretty much as scripted, Lord Ingram becomes the main suspect in his wife's disappearance and apparent murder which brings Charlotte Holmes into the picture. But, not in the way that readers have seen her over the course of the previous installment.
Charlotte, as “Sherrinford” Holmes, has to discover what is happening and why Lord Ingram is being targeted. This means working alongside Inspector Robert Treadles, and his boss Chief Investigator Fowler. Fowler is a thorn in the side but it's not a bad thing. He is renowned for solving difficult challenges, but he's never encountered Charlotte before. As for Charlotte, she can't actually say that she is confident she will find the real suspect before her friend and possible lover is arrested for murder.
One of the curiosities of this series has been that the author has made Sherlock Holmes a fictional character who is really Charlotte who is a female. Then, she twists things by letting Charlotte dress up as a man so that she can help Lord Ingram clear his name. The curious thing is that there are a few people who actually do know who Charlotte's alter-ego actually is which makes for a really interesting and yes, twisted story.
I mentioned Livia before, and I'll finish my review by saying that events have led her to participate more and more in each story. This time out she has to deal with the dynamic duo of tricksters, spinsters, and busy bodies in Lady Avery and Lady Somersby who end up being just the worst sort of sods imaginable. She is also highly protective of her oldest sister who her parents try hard to hide from the public. That just doesn't cut it for Livia, nor Charlotte for that matter. Livia is also moving towards her own happiness, hopefully, even with her sisters blessing and encouragement. Let's hope so.
Recommendation: yes, I really do recommend this series. I love Charlotte as a character. I love her analytical mind. I love her relationship with Livia. I love that she really doesn't hold anger issues when it comes to her being a societal outcast without friends outside of Lord Ingram and Mrs. Watson. These stories are filled with surprises and twists and I will continue to read the next book in the series.
Chapter 1
Several months later
Inspector
Robert Treadles accepted hat, lunch, and walking stick from his wife
with an approximation of a smile. “Thank you, my dear.”
Alice smiled back and kissed him on his cheek. “Good day, Inspector. Go forth and uphold law and order.”
She’d
been saying that for years, upon bidding him good-bye in the morning.
Lately, however, those words set him on edge. Or perhaps it wasn’t the
words, per se, but the feeling that from the moment he got up, she’d
been waiting for him to leave.
Near
the end of summer, her brother, Barnaby Cousins, had died. As he had
been without issue, in accordance to their late father’s will, Cousins
Manufacturing, the source of the family’s wealth, had devolved to Alice.
She
had told Treadles quite firmly that it would not change anything
between them. And she was right, but not for the reason she gave—that
she would still be the loving spouse he’d known and that he would not
feel the least diminishing in the care and affection he received from
her.
No, the reason
nothing had changed was that everything had already changed before her
brother’s death. Treadles had learned that she had always wished to run
the family business and only her father’s firmest refusal had turned her
gaze from that path.
He
still couldn’t completely articulate to himself the turmoil this had
unleashed in him, except to conclude that until that moment, he had
believed them to be a unified whole. Afterward, they were only two
separate people who lived under the same roof.
She
saw him out the front door with another smile. He started in the
direction of Scotland Yard. But once a week or so, on his way to work,
he stopped around the corner to look back. Each time her carriage had
drawn up precisely a quarter of an hour after his departure.
And the woman who entered the carriage, smart, gleaming, and coolly self-assured, was a stranger.
No,
that wasn’t entirely true. She had always known her own mind and been
competent at everything she did. And he had always taken great pride in
her—when she’d been the feather in his cap, the envy of his colleagues, a
woman who, despite the elevated circumstances into which she had been
born, had found in him everything she needed.
Except that had never been true, had it? She’d always needed more. And now she had it.
He walked faster, suddenly as impatient as she must be, to put distance between himself and his marital home.
His day, however, did not improve when he reached Scotland Yard. The Farr woman was there again, harassing Sergeant MacDonald.
“I
understand, Mrs. Farr,” said Sergeant MacDonald patiently. “But you
see, ma’am, I checked all the reports for unclaimed bodies first thing
this morning, and we still don’t have anyone who matches your sister’s
description. And without a body, we can’t declare this a murder case. We
haven’t the slightest evidence, in fact, that your sister is deceased.”
“But if she were alive, she would never have missed her niece’s birthday—at least not without any word.”
“Sergeant, I have work for you,” said Treadles as he walked past.
The
Farr woman raised her head. She was blind in one milky blue eye, her
other eye a dark, almost periwinkle blue. She might have been
good-looking once, but all she had now were a few lines and angles that,
like the ruins of a palace, hinted at yesteryear’s grandeur.
She
regarded Treadles steadily, expressionlessly. But he sensed the scorn
she chose not to show. What was it with those less-than-respectable
women who somehow felt superior enough to hold him in animosity and
contempt?
As he
marched off, he heard Sergeant MacDonald say, in a lowered voice, “I
have to go, Mrs. Farr. Think about what I said. Sherlock Holmes.”
“What did we tell you?” said Lady Holmes triumphantly. “What did we tell you?”
Livia gaped, unable to believe her own eyes.
She
had expected the worst. The worst. Her parents did not possess good
judgment. They were, furthermore, profligate and nearly bankrupt. When
they had informed Livia, after returning from a mysterious trip, that
they had found an exceptional place for their second-eldest daughter,
Livia had not believed in the least their description of this earthly
paradise.
Bernadine
did not speak, nor did she respond when spoken to. She rarely left her
room and spent her days spinning spools that had been hung on a wire.
She had never been able to look after herself, and Livia had no hope
that she ever would.
In
fact, Bernadine’s very existence filled Livia with despair. What if she
outlived everyone in the family? Who would look after her? Would she
escape to the woods and become feral, the kind of creature around which
adolescents spun eerie tales to give younger children nightmares?
Yet
upon being told that Bernadine would soon depart for an institution
that took in women with similar conditions, Livia had been outraged,
especially at her parents’ delight in the reasonableness of the fees.
Bernadine
didn’t bite the maids or disturb the neighbors. She never needed new
clothes and barely required any food. Yes, she was a burden to her
parents, but so was Livia, and all the other unmarried daughters in the
land. That she must be looked after was no reason to send her off to
bedlam.
But if this was bedlam, then Livia could only wish she herself was the one taking up permanent residence.
The
ivy-covered house boasted wide bay windows on the ground floor and
deep, cushioned window seats perfect for reading book after book. The
gardens were not too big or formal, but as trim and comfortable-looking
as the house, with hydrangeas and delphiniums still in bloom. Her
favorite was the narrow walkway that led out from the back, passing
under a long arching pergola and disappearing beyond a wrought iron
gate. The lane probably ended someplace excruciatingly ordinary, a
kitchen garden or a caretaker’s cottage. But Livia was free to imagine
that it was a magic path that led to a different beautiful and exciting
destination each time she set foot upon it.
The
inside of the house was as pretty and cozy as she’d hoped it would be,
with an air of contentment rather than ostentation. Even the residents
didn’t seem particularly lunatic. To be sure, there was a woman spinning
slowly in the corner of a parlor; another sitting on a large Oriental
rug, gazing at her bare toes; and a third stacking books on the opposite
end of the rug with the intent and seriousness of the builder of the
Colosseum, only to knock the stack down and start all over again.
Livia
eyed the fourth woman in the room, expecting her, too, to do something
bizarre. The woman, in a large starched cap and a long black dress,
stood close to the rotating woman, her back to the visitors. Only after a
while did Livia realize that she must be a minder employed by the
institution, there to make sure the spinner didn’t fall and hurt
herself.
Livia’s
parents had already moved on, pulling along an unhappy Bernadine. Livia
hurried after them. In the next room, a combination of a library and a
small picture gallery, two women sat at adjacent desks, both writing.
The scene appeared normal and serene, until Livia realized that one
woman was simply drawing lines again and again across the page and the
other’s paper was full of crude, grinning skulls.
Would Bernadine really be all right, surrounded by all these other women with their conditions?
But
Bernadine, apparently, had found her true home. Against the far wall of
the room stood a large rack of rods. The rods threaded through dozens
and dozens of objects, not only spools but gears and what looked like
the sails of miniature windmills.
Bernadine,
usually slow and shuffling in motion, crossed the room with the speed
of a comet. She slid onto the bench that had been provided and
immediately began to spin the objects nearest her. She wasn’t alone.
Next to her sat a woman in a turban, who spun gears—and only gears—with
just as much focus and interest.
“That is a perennial delight for some of our patients,” said Dr. Wrexhall, nodding with approval.
He
was also a surprise. Livia had expected an unctuous quack. But Dr.
Wrexhall was a man of dignified bearing and measured words.
“Which
one of the patients is the benefactress’s daughter?” asked Lady Holmes,
always curious about the wealthy and the very wealthy.
Dr.
Wrexhall had explained to Livia, who had not made the previous trip
with her parents, that Moreton Close was financed by the widow of an
extremely successful industrialist. They had only one child, a daughter.
She had wanted the girl to make her debut in Society and marry into one
of the finest families of the land. Alas, the girl’s condition had
precluded that from ever happening.
But
at Moreton Close, the daughter was and would always remain in the
company of other young women from the finest families of the land.
Livia
had thought it a stretch to elevate the Holmeses to such stature, but
her parents apparently considered it their due. Sir Henry strutted; Lady
Holmes, for the first time since Charlotte had run away from home, wore
a smug expression. Here at last they were being accorded the deference
due their station. And even better, no one seemed to know anything about
the disgrace attached to their youngest child.
They
preened in Dr. Wrexhall’s respectful attention until Livia reminded
them that they must hasten to the railway station. At their departure,
Bernadine paid them as little mind as her parents paid her. Livia was
the only one to hesitate a minute. She almost put a hand on Bernadine’s
shoulders. But whereas Charlotte had learned to tolerate a sister’s
touch, Bernadine would have immediately pushed Livia’s hand away.
In the end, she said, to the back of Bernadine’s head, “I’ll come back and see you when I can.”
As if she hadn’t heard anything, Bernadine set another two gears to spin.
Dr.
Wrexhall walked them out. “I trust you will understand, Sir Henry, Lady
Holmes, that we do not publicize our work here. The villagers are still
under the impression that this is a family residence. Everything we do,
of course, is based on the latest scientific methods and the most
humane of principles; but I’m afraid there are and will always be those
who would not understand and who would not wish to coexist peacefully
with us in their midst.”
Livia
could think of two such people listening to him right now—her parents
would have been outraged had there been such an establishment near their
residence.
“But of course,” said Lady Holmes. “We understand perfectly.”
“Excellent, ma’am. You may expect weekly reports.”
“We eagerly anticipate them,” said Sir Henry.
Liar.
He
wouldn’t bother with them at all, and neither would Lady Holmes. At
last they had achieved their hearts’ desire: They had got rid of
Bernadine in a manner that was more or less acceptable and they needed
never think of her again.
But
Livia would keep a close eye on the reports. She would visit Bernadine
whenever she could. And she would not allow Bernadine to be forgotten.
Otherwise, how would she ever face Charlotte again?
Usually
Livia looked forward to her annual visit to Mrs. Newell’s. Mrs. Newell
was Sir Henry’s cousin, and whatever entrĂ©e to Society the Holmes girls
had possessed was due more to her popularity than to any stature their
parents could claim, based on either lineage or connections.
In
recent years, Mrs. Newell had tired of town. But she still liked to
keep in the know. Besides a voluminous correspondence with everyone who
was anyone, she also hosted house parties after the end of the Season.
Sir
Henry and Lady Holmes were almost never invited—Mrs. Newell did not
care for their company. But she had a soft spot for Livia and Charlotte.
This year, for the first time, Livia would attend alone.
She
had dreaded the possibility that her parents would not allow her to go,
which Mrs. Newell had prevented by sending a railway ticket, already
paid for—and her own maid to accompany Livia on the journey.
But
her absence from home meant that she would not be on hand when the
first two reports arrived from Moreton Close. And there was no guarantee
her parents would save the reports for Livia’s return, even though
she’d specifically requested that. Lady Holmes was liable to throw them
into the grate out of pique that she herself hadn’t received an
invitation to Mrs. Newell’s. As for Sir Henry, Livia wouldn’t put it
past him to destroy those reports as they came through the door—he who
had long been revolted that he’d produced a childlike Bernadine.
She would not be surprised if he was now erasing all traces of Bernadine from their lives.
As
she boarded the train, however, foremost on her mind wasn’t Bernadine,
but gratitude that Mrs. Newell’s maid had produced a ticket of her own
and would not be sitting with Livia.
That—and a stomach-churning anxiety about the small package in her handbag.
Sir
Henry didn’t bother with the mail—which too often contained such
unpleasantness as notices from creditors—until midday. Lady Holmes was a
late riser due to frequent intimacy with her supply of laudanum. Livia,
then, was usually the first person to sort through the morning post.
This
morning, she had risen unusually late, having stayed up packing the
night before. As soon as she’d seen the two items addressed to her,
she’d heard Lady Holmes stomping down the stairs. There had been barely
enough time to hide them under her skirts. And she’d remained at table
an eon so that she could leave without anyone seeing them.
After that there had been only enough time to dress and leave. But now, finally, some blessed privacy.
But
no sooner had she given thanks for that solitude than a local squire’s
wife and her daughter entered the compartment. Livia was obliged to
engage in pleasantries. The squire’s wife was horrified that Livia,
after what had happened to Charlotte, was traveling alone—her
protestations about the maid that had been sent to accompany her fell on
deaf ears. These mere acquaintances declared their intention to forego
their own plans and chaperone Livia all the way to Mrs. Newell’s, with
the further insinuation that Livia might not be, in fact, headed to a
respectable relation’s house.
She
almost wept with relief three stops on, when the maid came to check on
her. That happened to be her would-be rescuers’ stop, and they detrained
rather reluctantly. At last alone in her compartment, it was several
minutes before she was calm enough to take out the letter and the
package.
The
handwriting on the letter she didn’t recognize, which most likely meant
that it was from Charlotte, who could write in different hands. And they
had devised a system whereby Charlotte sent her pamphlets, with a
letter sometimes concealed inside glued-together pages.
But as exciting as it always was to receive word from Charlotte, the one Livia had been dying to open was the small package.
She
had become better at not thinking about the young man who had arrived
in her life like a surprise present—excitement, allure, and more than a
hint of mystery. They had met three times. Two had been delightful,
joyous occasions; and then came the fateful third encounter, during
which he’d revealed himself to be Mr. Myron Finch, her illegitimate half
brother.
And she had
been shattered by the revelation—and nauseated to have felt a great
deal of incestuous sentiments for this bright, personable young man.
Only to collapse in relief when Charlotte had sent message that he was not their brother.
All
that had happened near the end of the Season. She had met Charlotte
only one time afterward, the night before the Holmes household left
London. And she had, very deliberately, mentioned neither their
illegitimate half brother nor the man she had fallen in love with who
wasn’t, thank God, Mr. Myron Finch.
Her
intentional lack of inquisitiveness meant that she’d failed to learn
what Charlotte knew about him. But Livia had harbored other hopes:
Shortly before that meeting with Charlotte, he had sent her a beautiful,
hand-illustrated bookmark of a woman in white reading on a park bench,
which had been exactly how they’d met.
It
hadn’t seemed overmuch to expect that he would write to her at some
point. But the bookmark had signaled the beginning and the end of their
correspondence.
He had disappeared, and she had no idea whether she ought to wait or forget him altogether.
Or rather, she knew she ought to forget him, but she had not succeeded—she couldn’t even be sure she had tried properly.
Maybe she never needed to: This package bore his handwriting.
Her heart palpitated. She opened the package and, with shaking fingers, teased apart the top of the velvet pouch it contained.
Inside
the pouch was a cabochon. Of moonstone. One of the two books they had
discussed, upon their first meeting, was titled Moonstone. The other, of
course, was The Woman in White, as represented by the bookmark.
It
was him. But what did this mean? Was it a significant signal, or the
beginning of another long stretch of silence? Of nothing but her lonely
and useless yearning?
Perhaps
she ought to speak to Charlotte. Why had he tried to pass himself off
as their illegitimate brother? Who was he? And what exactly were his
intentions toward her? A bookmark was an acceptable gift from a male
friend. A cabochon, on the other hand . . . Had it been mounted as a
ring or set as the centerpiece of a pendant, it would have been outright
improper: A man who wasn’t married or related to her could not present
her with jewelry.
As
it was, smooth and polished but not ready to wear, the cabochon fell
into a gray area, so gray one might as well call it charcoal.
She
held the cabochon for a long time, then she returned it to its pouch
and placed the pouch carefully in an inside pocket of her handbag.
Summer
was long gone, but winter had not yet arrived. This was a time of the
year when weeks of dreary rain alternated with rare crisp, clear days .
Outside the train the sky was blue and the sun shone.
Livia had met her nameless young man under precisely such a blue sky, such a shining sun.
She shook her head and reached for the letter.
Dear Miss Holmes,
I have news of your sister, Miss Charlotte Holmes.
Livia recoiled. Who was this? She looked for the signature. Caroline Avery.
Lady Avery!
Lady
Avery and her sister, Lady Somersby, were Society’s leading gossips.
They had been after Livia for news of Charlotte’s whereabouts ever since
Charlotte ran away from home. Livia, of course, had never divulged to a
single soul that Charlotte was now living in a fine house facing
Regent’s Park and conducting business as Sherlock Holmes at 18 Upper
Baker Street.
What
did Lady Avery know? And how had she obtained that knowledge? Her heart
constricting with a sense of foreboding, Livia read on.
It
came about in a most indirect and surprising manner. I was recently at
Cowes, on the Isle of Wight. The day before my departure, my own maid
being unwell, I engaged a maid from the hotel to help me pack.
As
I supervised her in the wrapping of some frangible items, she claimed,
upon coming across a picture in the months-old newspaper, that she had
seen the gentleman. As it turned out, the subject of the photograph was
Lord Ingram Ashburton, taken on the occasion of his last polo match of
the Season. The maid was certain that she had not made a mistake, her
reason being that one did not so easily forget a man such as Lord
Ingram.
She told me
that during the Season she had worked at a tea shop in Hounslow, not too
far from the heath. And one Saturday, still in the height of the
Season, he had come in with a lady to whom he appeared devoted. This
piqued my attention, since the woman could not possibly have been Lady
Ingram.
I asked her
to give me a description of Lord Ingram’s companion. These were her
exact words: She could be on an advert for Pears soap, if she lost half a
stone. Or maybe one stone.
My
mind immediately turned to Miss Charlotte Holmes. Of course, given my
reputation for accuracy and reliability, I couldn’t base my claims only
on the girl’s account, as tantalizing as it was. Instead, I went home,
fetched an album of photographs, and returned to the hotel in Cowes.
I
showed the girl a picture that had been taken two years ago at Lord
Wrenworth’s house party. There were some forty guests in all, and she
had no problem identifying Miss Charlotte as Lord Ingram’s companion.
I
made sure to ascertain that this sighting happened after Miss
Charlotte’s scandal. The girl assured me that earlier in the summer she
had not been working at that particular establishment and so could only
have seen them in July, well after Miss Charlotte had left home.
If
this is unknown to you, I am pleased to be the bearer of good news:
that your sister is alive and well. Or at least she was at the time she
was last seen with Lord Ingram—and I cannot imagine that he would allow
her to come to harm. If this is known to you, I should be obliged if you
would either corroborate or correct what I have learned thus far.
Yours truly,
Caroline Avery
Caroline Avery
Chapter 2
Ninety minutes after breakfast, Miss Charlotte Holmes was on her second slice of Madeira cake.
The
cottage Mrs. John Watson had hired for their country sojourn gave onto a
lovely panorama of green hills and gentle valleys. But its interior was
faded, with small and oddly placed windows. As a result, the parlor,
even on a sunny day, was underlit, almost gloomy. And Miss Holmes, in
her creamy dress the sleeves of which were abundantly embroidered with
green vines and magenta flowers, was the brightest object in the room.
She
hadn’t spoken since she sat down half an hour ago. Not speaking was her
natural state and Mrs. Watson had learned to savor Miss Holmes’s
silences. To think of them as something similar to the quietude of a
slope covered in wildflowers, or the restfulness of rolling pastures
dotted with new calves.
Since
the night Miss Holmes helped her brother escape, however, the sense of
tranquility had gradually disappeared from her silences. Lately, sitting
near her, Mrs. Watson thought of London fogs, thick and all-obscuring,
of maritime brumes, the kind that made ships sail straight into rocky
cliffs, and even, occasionally, of quagmire and quicksand, seemingly
innocuous surfaces waiting to entrap hapless travelers.
Even
her delight in the consumption of sweet, buttery goods felt…less
joyful. She ate more—Mrs. Watson scarcely came upon her without seeing a
biscuit or an entire Victoria sponge parked by her side. But the woman
across from Mrs. Watson demolished her third slice of Madeira cake with
not so much pleasure as a mechanical neediness, the way a tense man
would light one cigarette after another.
In
the days and weeks immediately following Mr. Finch’s narrow escape,
Mrs. Watson, too, had been frantic with worry. She and Miss Holmes had
conferred frequently and at length concerning the various scenarios that
could arise, and what their countermeasures must be in any given
situation.
But months
went by and nothing happened. Mrs. Watson, as fretful as she could be,
began to relax. Sooner or later everyone made a mistake. Even the
otherwise unflappable Miss Holmes must overreact from time to time.
“My
dear,” she said, “we’ve been here three days and you’ve scarcely gone
out. What say you we make a tour of Stern Hollow today?”
Stern
Hollow was Lord Ingram’s estate. They hadn’t hired a house in the area
for his sake. They’d come because Mrs. Newell, Miss Holmes’s first
cousin, once removed, lived nearby—and Miss Holmes’s sister was expected
at Mrs. Newell’s for the latter’s house party.
But Mrs. Watson was confident that Miss Holmes did not mind at all that Lord Ingram also happened to be close at hand.
“We
needn’t call on the master of Stern Hollow. We could simply apply to
see the house. And he could come upon us as a coincidence, Ă la Lizzy
Bennet’s visit to Pemberley.”
Miss
Holmes eyed a fourth slice of Madeira cake, but did not reach for
it—possibly because she was approaching Maximum Tolerable Chins, the
point at which she began regulating such things as further helping of
cakes and puddings. “Is that a literary reference?”
“You haven’t read Pride and Prejudice?” cried Mrs. Watson, scandalized. “How is that possible?”
“My
sister is the great devourer of fiction in our household. As a girl, I
found novels difficult to understand—I found people difficult to
understand. From time to time I would read a story or two, if my sister
absolutely insisted. She did not insist on Pride and Prejudice.”
“Well,
I might need to, in that case. The scene I mentioned, Miss Bennet and
Mr. Darcy coming upon each other by accident, is so very—” Mrs. Watson
barely managed to swallow her next word, romantic. “Well, it makes for
riveting fiction.”
Though
perhaps not the best analogy for the situation between Miss Holmes and
Lord Ingram. Miss Austen wrote with humor and perspicacity, but she also
wrote with tremendous decorum. What would she think of Miss Holmes’s
current situation as a woman no longer received in any polite drawing
rooms—or the fact that Lord Ingram was still a married man, absent wife
or not?
“Anyway,” she
hastened to add, “do let us make a point of touring the place. It is
most attractive, from what I understand. And in any case, Lord Ingram
might very well already be at Mrs. Newell’s for her party.”
“He wouldn’t leave his children to attend a house party, however nearby.”
“Oh,
you don’t know? Well, of course you couldn’t have heard yet, since I
only learned it myself this morning. His children left with Lord
Remington weeks ago.”
Lord
Remington was the third Ashburton brother, the youngest besides Lord
Ingram. Even so, there was an eleven-year difference between the two.
Miss
Holmes, who had been studying a plate of almond biscuits, looked up.
“Lord Remington is in England? The family’s black sheep?”
Lord
Remington had spent nearly the entirety of his adult life abroad. Mrs.
Watson had a soft spot in her heart for him, but even she had to concur,
somewhat at least, with Miss Holmes’s assessment. “I might call him the
grayest of the flock. Currently, that is. When they were all young—and
Lord Ingram barely out of the womb—Lord Bancroft was, in fact,
considered the actual black sheep.”
“Really?” Miss Holmes’s question emerged slowly and seemed to linger in the air.
“You would have been an infant then. But he was notoriously spendthrift. The old duke broke canes beating him.”
“Hmm.”
“I
know. How people change. One should never be judged on one’s
adolescence. Now where was I? Oh, Lord Remington. From what I hear, the
children were smitten with their uncle, and when he asked if they wanted
to come with him to the seaside, they absolutely could not be held
back.”
“I guess in that case, there is no reason for Lord Ingram not to be at Mrs. Newell’s,” said Miss Holmes.
She
took hold of an almond biscuit, then, remembering herself, set it down
and instead picked up the correspondence that had come for Sherlock
Holmes.
The
consulting detective had stated in adverts that he would be away from
London for some time. As a result, the previous month, Mrs. Watson and
Miss Holmes had run themselves into the ground seeing to a torrent of
clients motivated by this upcoming scarcity to request a consultation in
the here and now.
But
of course, there were always those who didn’t read the adverts
carefully. And Mr. Mears, Mrs. Watson’s faithful butler holding down the
fort in London, had forwarded a batch of letters that had arrived in
Sherlock Holmes’s private box at the General Post Office.
Miss Holmes quickly opened and scanned all the letters; then she read one letter again and handed it over to Mrs. Watson.
Dear Mr. Sherlock Holmes,
Sergeant MacDonald at Scotland Yard told me to write you. Do you still help with murders?
Sincerely,
Mrs. Winnie Farr
Mrs. Winnie Farr
The
handwriting was boxy and all in majuscule letters, done by a dull
pencil that had been wielded with enough pressure to cause a cramp in
the writing hand. The paper had not been made from any virgin material
but of fibers that had been repulped. And the envelope took advantage of
the blank side of a handbill for the latest miracle tonic, with the
General Post Office as the return address.
“I’m
sure you have deduced that this woman might not have seven shillings on
hand for a consultation,” said Mrs. Watson. “I take it you think she
wouldn’t have written to us if she didn’t think she had something of
value to offer us in lieu of payment?”
The handwriting, despite its lack of ease and prettiness, had a proud, almost haughty quality.
“That is, of course, the hope,” said Miss Holmes.
“And if we should be mistaken in that hope?”
Miss
Holmes planned to remove her sisters from the family home, with
payments of one hundred quid a year to their parents. As the only
consulting detective in the world, she didn’t lack for clients. But the
reasonableness of her fees, and the fact that most of her clients
presented problems that, however perplexing, also happened to be minor,
meant that even with Mrs. Watson’s ability to raise those fees at the
least sign that a client could afford more, they were still fifty pounds
short of that goal.
Not
to mention that Miss Holmes, almost as soon as her income had become
regular, had insisted on remitting weekly sums for room and board to
Mrs. Watson, in addition to the latter’s share in Sherlock Holmes’s
proceeds.
Miss
Bernadine Holmes required someone to keep an eye on her. Miss Livia, who
required only food and a roof over her head, was ostensibly less
expensive. But Mrs. Watson knew that Miss Holmes also wanted to give
Miss Livia books and trips abroad. And for Miss Bernadine, not just a
harried maid but a nurse with experience and compassion for her care.
Altogether, the obligations she planned to take on were fearsome for a
young woman who could rely on only her own abilities.
And
however extraordinary those abilities, she didn’t have access to more
hours in the day than anyone else. To give her time to Mrs. Farr could
mean forgoing more solvent clients.
“It
isn’t a certainty that we will hear more from Mrs. Farr, or that hers
will be a situation for which we can render any aid,” said Miss Holmes.
“I should write back for more information, then?”
“If you would, please,” murmured Miss Holmes. “Now, about our plans to visit Stern Hollow, ma’am.”
Livia clutched at the moonstone as if it were a talisman that could fend off all the evils and misfortunes of the world.
Or,
at least, all the curiosity from the guests who would, just beyond
Livia’s hearing, be making endless conjectures about Charlotte and Lord
Ingram.
She knew what
conclusion everyone would leap to, as soon as Lady Avery’s news spread:
that Charlotte hadn’t disappeared, but had become Lord Ingram’s
mistress.
This would
be, of course, profoundly distressing: Charlotte had proved perfectly
capable of keeping herself; and Lord Ingram would never have demanded
such a tawdry exchange for his help. But it shouldn’t be any more
distressing than what Livia had already put up with during the Season,
with tongues always wagging just beyond—and sometimes just within—her
hearing.
And yet she
was almost nauseated by her own anxiety. The sense of foreboding that
had descended when she first read the letter had only grown stronger.
Which was ridiculous. The story wasn’t common knowledge yet. And even if
it should become so, it would simply be an extra serving of
unpleasantness in an already unpleasant world.
Lord
Ingram’s estate was nearby, was it not? If she sent him a note, he
would call on her, wouldn’t he, and assure her that whatever Lady Avery
could unleash would only be a passing nuisance, soon dismissed and soon
forgotten?
As if the
universe heard her plea, Lord Ingram descended the front step of Mrs.
Newell’s manor just as Livia’s carriage pulled up.
He
wasn’t classically handsome but turned heads anyway, the kind of man
who sent a jolt of electricity through a crowd by doing nothing more
than stepping into the room. When he remained still, he made her think
of a cobra about to uncoil. In motion he put her in mind of a large
panther, stalking silently through the jungle.
He handed her down from the carriage. “Miss Holmes. I’m glad to see you.”
Usually
she found him intimidating, but today his aura of assurance was exactly
what she needed. Already she felt a little less panicked. “That
sentiment is most certainly reciprocated, my lord. How do you do?”
“I am well. Mrs. Newell informed me that she is expecting you.”
“She has been most kind to extend an invitation. And Lady Ingram, I hope she is much improved?”
His
wife’s decampment to a Swiss sanatorium would have been a much bigger
topic of gossip had it not happened so close to the end of Season. When
she hadn’t received the ladies who had called on her, as was customary
after a ball, it was assumed that her bad back must be bothering her
again. It took will and effort for her to appear graceful in movement,
and an entire summer of such pretense exacted a severe toll.
It
wasn’t until Society had largely dispersed to Cowes, Scotland, and
hundreds of country houses all over the land that her friends received
letters informing them that her health had deteriorated suddenly and it
had been deemed prudent that she remove herself to the Alps where she
could be properly looked after by a team of German and Swiss physicians.
Livia,
like everyone else, hadn’t learned of this development until after she
had left London. She had written Charlotte about it, in the course of
their surreptitious correspondence, since Charlotte had, earlier in the
summer, asked Livia out of the blue what the latter thought of Lady
Ingram’s romantic past, and had even tasked Livia to extract what ladies
Avery and Somersby knew of that particular topic.
At
the time, distracted by what she had believed to be catastrophic
romantic leanings on her own part, Livia had not paid particular
attention to Charlotte’s inquiry. But in light of Lady Ingram’s
departure, Livia asked Charlotte in her letter, was it not likely that
Charlotte had been correct and Lady Ingram had at last decided to run
away with her erstwhile sweetheart?
Charlotte
had replied that they ought not to speculate. Livia, however, grew only
more convinced over time. And to think, she had begun to thaw a little
toward that woman. How abominably she had treated her husband.
“Her
physicians assure me that her condition has stabilized,” said Lord
Ingram, in response to her question about his wife’s health, “but she is
still in need of their expertise.”
Did that mean she truly wasn’t coming back?
“I am glad to hear that,” Livia said. “I hope she continues to improve.”
“Thank
you, Miss Holmes. I’m sure she appreciates your kind thoughts.” For a
moment she feared he was about to wish her good day and take his leave.
But he glanced to his left and asked, “By the way, have you seen Mrs.
Newell’s new fountains?”
Thank
goodness. It wouldn’t do for them to hold a conversation standing on
Mrs. Newell’s front steps. Nor could they disappear into some cranny in
the house or on the grounds. The fountains were perfectly visible from
both the house and the drive and would give their conversation every
appearance of propriety, without letting the actual exchange be
overheard.
“A glimpse and only a glimpse, I’m afraid,” she said. “Do let us study them in some detail.”
As
soon as they were out of earshot, Livia went to the crux of the matter.
“I received a detestable letter from Lady Avery. I don’t suppose you
were so fortunate as to be spared a similar missive.”
He smiled wryly. “I wasn’t.”
“I have no idea how I ought to respond. I was going to write you as soon as I’d settled in here. Have you replied?”
“I have—and told Lady Avery that it had been a chance encounter.”
Livia had learned from Charlotte that she and Lord Ingram had been in
contact—of course Charlotte wouldn’t have left him in suspense as to her
fate—but Livia hadn’t expected them to be out in public. “So you did
meet at the time and place Lady Avery specified?”
“I’m afraid so.”
And now Lady Avery had his confirmation in writing. “People will draw all kinds of unsavory conclusions!”
They’d
walked twice around one fountain; Lord Ingram guided her to the other.
“That cannot be helped. Fortunately, their conjectures cannot materially
injure Miss Charlotte.”
True. As a fallen woman, Charlotte’s reputation couldn’t be besmirched any further. “What about you, my lord?”
“Me?”
There was a trace of amusement in his voice. Or was it irony? “For what
it’s worth, I will not be barred from Society for having met with Miss
Charlotte in broad daylight.”
This
Livia knew. He could have done far worse and not be punished in
remotely the same way. Roger Shrewsbury, the man who had compromised
Charlotte, was still accepted everywhere he went. “All the same, I hope
the rumors won’t prove a nuisance.”
He
touched her lightly on the elbow. “It will be a nuisance, but you
mustn’t worry, Miss Holmes. It’ll be forgotten by Christmas. And life
will go on, for both Miss Charlotte and myself.”
His
attentiveness, his confidence, his matter-of-fact approach to the
upcoming brouhaha—Livia could not have hoped for a kinder or more
fortifying reception. Basking in his presence, she felt downright silly
about her undue agitation, making a Matterhorn out of a molehill.
Indeed, by the time he took his leave, she was smiling.
But
the moment he disappeared from sight, uncertainty came rushing back,
accompanied by a cold, hard dread. It will not end well, said a voice in
her head.
It cannot possibly end well.
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