Page 36
Frederick rounded the hallway to see Grace as she stared out into the storm with the front door wide open, her face much too pale to be normal. He hurried his pace.
He was almost at her side when he caught sight of someone standing just beyond the threshold. But before he could do anything, Grace slammed the door shut, narrowly missing the poor soul outside.
“What are you doing?”
She spun toward him, her eyes impossibly wide. “That was Tony Dixon,” she said, pointing a shaky finger toward the door. “At the door. The ghost of Tony Dixon knocked and I opened it. And there he was.”
A knock came, almost as if to underscore her words. “Grace, let me in.”
Grace’s eyes grew wider. If that were possible. “See?”
“Tony Dixon?” Frederick repeated, as if the name might suddenly make sense if he said it out loud.
She nodded solemnly. “His ghost.”
He narrowed his eyes at his wife. There had to be a rational explanation for this. “Grace, ghosts don’t knock.” Had he truly said that out loud?
“How do you know?” she shot back, her voice high pitched and panicked. “I think Jacob Marley knocked before visiting Ebenezer Scrooge.”
Another knock interrupted her, this one more impatient. “For heaven’s sake, I’m not dead!”
“A villainous ghost would say that, Frederick,” she squeaked and then met his gaze. Whatever she saw there seemed to calm her. “You’re right. If he were truly a villainous ghost, he’d just walk through the door.”
Frederick stared at her a moment longer and then opened the door, revealing a shivering Tony Dixon who, in Grace’s defense, looked as if he had crawled out of a graveyard somewhere and was barely clinging to life.
With a nod of gratitude, Tony stepped across the threshold and would have collapsed to the floor if Frederick hadn’t caught him. He felt very much flesh and blood. Drenched, shivering, and cold, but alive.
“Grace, call for Zahra. We’ll need her help. Have her bring a blanket from the bed and meet me in the library. The smaller room will be much warmer than this open space.”
Grace sent another look to Tony, then Frederick, and ran up the stairs, calling for Zahra as she went.
Frederick adjusted his grip, shifting Tony’s weight onto his shoulder, and half-dragged, half-led the man into the library. Tony let out a groan as he settled into the high-back chair by the fire, his movements sluggish but intentional.
Was this really happening? Tony Dixon wasn’t dead?
Frederick crouched beside him, studying the man who, by all logic, should still be in the morgue. “I imagine you have quite the story to tell.”
Tony’s breath shuddered as he forced himself upright against the cushions, his face pale and hollowed out like old parchment. He ushered up a weak smile, his brown hair plastered over his pale forehead. “Certainly not a fun one and a little impossible to believe.”
“I’m fairly good at believing the impossible.” Frederick raised an eyebrow. “Allow me to fetch tea and sandwiches for you, and then I’ll be back to hear it. I know Grace would want to as well.”
Tony caught Frederick’s arm as he stood. “Where’s Lillias?”
Frederick’s shoulders slumped a little, and he nodded. “I’ll explain everything when I return. For now, rest and get warm.” He shrugged a shoulder, tagging on a grin. “And try not to do anything ghostly, especially when my wife enters the room.”
Tony coughed out a laugh, and Frederick made a clipped pace to the kitchen.
He hadn’t seen Tony since learning the man had tried to maim him during a horseback ride due to jealousy over Lillias.
Had that only been seven or eight months ago?
It felt like a lifetime, and certainly their situations had changed dramatically since then.
To his surprise, Mrs. Lindsay sat in the kitchen, sipping some tea, and tried to stand as he entered the room. He waved her back to her seat. “Thank you, Mrs. Lindsay, but I’ll see to things myself while you recover.”
The last thing he needed was to try and catch someone else from hitting the ground.
“I’ll not have an earl poking around in my kitchen like a scullery maid.”
He dipped his head in reference to her words and offered a smile he hoped she’d accept. “You’ve had quite the time of it the past day, and I’m capable, perhaps not as much as a scullery maid, of finding something to eat.”
Mrs. Lindsay’s chin lifted in quiet approval, though her eyes were still narrowed. “I’ve already made some sandwiches, knowing you all would be needing them after my layin’ up,” she said with a huff. “Doesn’t do well for a cook to leave her kitchen unattended.”
“I’m certain no one can use this kitchen quite as well as you.” Frederick scanned the space. “And I’m in awe that you’ve already been up enough to make sandwiches.”
“And tea.” She gestured toward the side table. “Tea’s steeping on the stove there, under the cozy, and the sandwiches are in the icebox.” She pointed. “There.”
He followed her directions, chuckling quietly to himself. “You are a wonder, Mrs. Lindsay.”
In all his adult life, Frederick would never have imagined himself in a modest townhouse kitchen, preparing sandwiches for his mistakenly deceased brother-in-law after his sister-in-law went missing on a quest to find a will in a castle she wasn’t even supposed to be in.
He shook his head as he balanced the tray carefully.
And this was his life.
He met Grace and Zahra just outside the door to the library. Grace held a large blanket in her arms and sent him a look of relief. “Oh good. You’re going in too. I just wanted to make sure we all saw the same thing at the same time.”
Frederick paused, balancing the tray in one hand, and raised an eyebrow. “I assure you, Tony is quite solid—and alive. Though he may not feel like it at the moment.”
Grace peeked past him at the door, biting her lip. “I must admit, I’ve never read where a ghost chose to stand outside in the rain when he could very well materialize through a door. So at least that’s in his favor as proof.”
“I do not think ghosts are usually polite,” Zahra added, and Frederick’s grin slipped wide.
“Ah, Grace. More proof.” He gestured toward Zahra. “Ghosts are not usually polite.” Frederick gave a faint chuckle as he nudged the door open with his foot.
Grace rolled her eyes, though her smile almost made an appearance, until the door creaked open and Tony, still slumped in the chair, came back into view. “He still looks ghostly,” she whispered, following him into the room with Zahra at her heels.
Zahra tilted her head, her little face scrunched up in concentration. “He does not look very dead, only very wet.”
Tony let out a raspy laugh from the settee, accepting the blanket Grace handed him and wrapping it around himself. His teeth chattered, but he managed a weak grin. “I am that.”
“This is Zahra.” Frederick set the tray nearby. “She’s our daughter we adopted from Egypt.”
“Adopted?” Tony took a longer look of Zahra and pressed his head back against the chair. “What an introduction to the world outside of Egypt.”
“She’s probably seen worse.” Grace stepped to the tea and poured a cup, offering it to Tony, her expression still wary.
He shot Zahra a look before taking the teacup from Grace. His hands shook the cup all the way to his mouth, but after a few sips he offered a relieved sigh. “Thank you. It feels like I haven’t been warm in weeks. Definitely not since I woke up.”
There was a quietness about Tony Dixon, maybe even humility? Had that been a trait of his before his financial troubles, or was it something learned from hardship?
Frederick understood that type of life learning all too well.
“Where exactly did you wake up?” Grace slid down on the settee nearby, her attention fully fixed on Tony. Frederick guessed his wife was still trying to convince herself Tony wasn’t going to evaporate before her eyes.
Tony’s head lolled back against the settee, his body seeming less tense than it had been. “The morgue.”
Grace gasped.
“Good night, Dixon,” Frederick muttered, crossing the room to sit beside Grace. “The morgue ?”
“Nearly terrified one of the watchmen to death.” Tony’s eyes opened slowly, and he gave a weak shrug. “Once he called the doctor and consulted the coroner, they determined I wasn’t actually dead.”
“My faith in the medical community has just grown exponentially.” Frederick’s tone was dry, inspiring a tired grin from Tony.
Tony’s mouth twitched in a weak grin. “The doctor said the wound was shallow, but the blood on my shirt made it look worse. Someone must’ve assumed I’d bled out.
The watchman told me they’d had several accidents that day, so I was sent to the cellar until the coroner could ‘process’ me for the police.
” He shivered, and Frederick was certain those chills had more to do with the memory than the cold.
“Shallow wound?” Frederick clarified.
Tony nodded. “The doctor thought I’d been stabbed by someone untrained or interrupted in the process. The coroner believed that the cold in the cellar slowed my bleeding, my pulse, my breathing—it made everything look like I was …”
“Dead?” Grace finished for him, her eyes wide. “Tony, if you hadn’t awakened when you did …”
“Don’t mention it, Grace.” He raised a palm to stop her. “I can’t think about it, especially after waking up in a room full of coffins.”
“You must have felt like you’d stepped straight into Dracula,” Grace whispered.
“Or a nightmare.” Tony took another sip of tea, his hand steadier.
“And they just … released you from the morgue?” Frederick couldn’t quite grasp the idea of it. “Shouldn’t they have sent you to a hospital?”
“They were going to,” Tony admitted. “But I escaped.”
“Escaped?” Grace repeated, her initial shock giving way to the unmistakable gleam of fascination.
Frederick could just imagine the images she was creating in her head.
His shoulders tightened. None of those imaginings could equal what it must have been like for Tony. Nightmare, indeed.
Table of Contents
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- Page 36 (Reading here)
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