Page 113 of A Dangerous Mourning (William Monk 2)
And how to prove it?
The only proof was Beatrice’s word about the torn lace lilies. But would she swear to that when she knew what it meant?
Hester needed an ally in the house. She knew Monk was outside; she had seen his dark figure every time she had passed the window, but he could not help in this.
Septimus. He was the one person she was sure was not involved, and who might have the courage to fight. And it would take courage. Percival was dead and to everyone else the matter was closed. It would be so much easier to let it all lie.
She changed her direction and instead of going to Beatrice’s room went on along the passage to Septimus’s.
He was propped up on the bed reading with the book held far in front of him for his longsighted eyes. He looked up with surprise when she came in. He was so much better her attentions were more in the nature of friendship than any medical need. He saw instantly that there was something gravely concerning her.
“What has happened?” he asked anxiously. He set the book down without marking the page.
There was nothing to be served by prevarication. She closed the door and came over and sat on the bed.
“I have made a discovery about Octavia’s death—in fact two.”
“And they are very grave,” he said earnestly. “I see that they trouble you. What are they?”
She took a deep breath. If she was mistaken, and he was implicated, or more loyal to the family, less brave than she believed, then she might be endangering herself more than she could cope with. But she would not retreat now.
“She did not die in her bedroom. I have found where she died.” She watched his face. There was nothing but interest. No start of guilt. “In Sir Basil’s study,” she finished.
He was confused. “In Basil’s study? But, my dear, that doesn’t make any sense! Why would Percival have gone to her there? And what was she doing there in the middle of the night anyway?” Then slowly the light faded from his face. “Oh—you mean that she did learn something that day, and you know what it was? Something to do with Basil?”
She told him what she had learned at the War Office, and that Octavia had been there the day of her death and learned the same.
“Oh dear God!” he said quietly. “The poor child—poor, poor child.” For several seconds he stared at the coverlet, then at last he looked up at her, his face pinched, his eyes grim and frightened. “Are you saying that Basil killed her?”
“No. I believe she killed herself—with the paper knife there in the study.”
“Then how did she get up to the bedroom?”
“Someone found her, cleaned the knife and returned it to its stand, then carried her upstairs and broke the creeper outside the window, took a few items of jewelry and a silver vase, and left her there for Annie to discover in the morning.”
“So that it should not be seen as suicide, with all the shame and scandal—” He drew a deep breath and his eyes widened in appalled horror. “But dear God! They let Percival hang for it!”
“I know.”
“But that’s monstrous. It’s murder.”
“I know that.”
“Oh—dear heaven,” he said very quietly. “What have we sunk to? Do you know who it was?”
She told him about the peignoir.
“Araminta,” he said very quietly. “But not alone. Who helped her? Who carried poor Octavia up the stairs?”
“I don’t know. It must have been a man—but I don’t know who.”
“And what are you going to do about this?”
“The only person who can prove any of it is Lady Moidore. I think she would want to. She knows it was not Percival, and I believe she might find any alternative better than the uncertainty and the fear eating away at all her relationships forever.”
“Do you?” He thought about it for some time, his hand curling and uncurling on the bedspread. “Perhaps you are right. But whether you are or not, we cannot let it pass like this—whatever its cost.”
“Then will you come with me to Lady Moidore and see if she will swear to the peignoir’s being torn the night of Octavia’s death and in her room all night, and then returned some time later?”
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