"Like Jennifer."
"She was more retiring than Jenny. Jenny can work herself up. She's an actress, our Jenny. She puts on a role like a dress, that child. Not young mistress Eleanor. Scared of her own shadow, that one."
I grunted this time.
"The old General and Charon Light, they worked it out right here in this kitchen. I was here, serving tea. They'd marry the child to young Will, in name only, so she'd be safe. This was only a couple days before the storm broke. Kenrick couldn't do nothing to upset the old General. He was the only rock between Karenta and defeat in the Cantard in those days."
The war hadn't meant much to me back then. My father had been dead for years, killed down there, and I wasn't old enough to worry about going. But I did recall that, at about that time, Karenta's fortunes had been at low ebb and there'd been talk about the elder Stantnor being the only man who could handle the Venageti of the day.
"You want the benefit of my suspicion, I think Charon Light was going to deal. Going to sell the plot for immunity. I don't know if that's how she went. She didn't survive."
I told her, "I'm starting to get confused. I thought Jennifer was born about then. And she had an older brother."
"Half brother. His mother was the General's first wife. Have-to wedding when he was sixteen. Daughter of a serving woman. But you don't need to know that."
"I need to know everything if I'm going to make sense of what's happening. Hidden things kill. What happened to the first wife?"
"They stayed married till the boy was old enough for tutors and nannies. Then he put her aside. The old General sent the family away."
"Hard feelings involved?"
"Plenty. But the old General bought them off. He reminded young Will every day. Especially if he spent a night out wenching. A terror, he was, when he was a lad. Obsessed, you might say." She didn't sound like she'd thought him an amusing rake. He didn't sound like somebody I'd have liked.
For fifteen minutes I tried to get her to tell me more. I got only enough to guess the young Stantnor was a crude ass, a driven philanderer whose life had gained direction and meaning only after his permanent move to the Cantard.
"So he wasn't a nice guy. Who from those days hated him enough to—"
"No." There was no equivocation there. "That's life, Garrett. The hurt don't hang on. Everybody does stupid things when they're young."
Some don't ever stop.
"Everybody grows out of them. You don't laugh at them when you look back, but you don't take a killing grudge to your grave, neither."
I don't know. The Stantnors seemed pretty skewed. If that extended to their circle, someone in contact might hold a grudge over something normal people would call bad luck.
"Then you tell me. Who's haunting him?"
She stopped working, looked at me. She'd remembered something she hadn't thought about in years. For a moment she teetered on the brink of telling me. Then she shook her head. Her face closed down. "No. It wasn't that way."
"What wasn't?"
"Nothing. Some cruel gossip. Nothing to do with us today."
"You'd better tell me. It might have some bearing."
"I don't repeat no lies about no one. Wouldn't have nothing to do with this, nohow."
I got my third pot of hot water. I was tearing them up. I bet she hadn't seen so many clean dishes in years. I'm good for something. Can't keep people from killing each other, but I'm a wiz at washing dishes. Might be time to consider a career change.
After a while, she said, "What goes around comes around. He sure fell for Missus Eleanor. She was his goddess."
We all want what we're not supposed to have. I tried an encouraging grunt. When that didn't get any response I tried a direct question. She said, "I think I done talked too much already. I think I done said things I shouldn't have said to no outsider."
I doubted that. I thought she'd weighed every word and had told me exactly what she wanted me to know. She'd give me another ration when she thought I was ready.
"I hope you know what you're doing. I'd bet there're things in your head that could save lives."
Maybe I pressed a touch too hard there. She didn't have to be told what she already knew. She resented it. She gave me a dirty look and clammed up till dinnertime. Then she only growled and gave orders.
33
After supper, having finally gotten the doctor and Saucerhead off, Morley and I headed for my suite. As we climbed the stairs, I said, "I guess old Dellwood got tired of waiting." He'd abandoned the coach hours earlier, according to the coachman, who wasn't pleased with his own lot. It hadn't occurred to anyone to ask him in out of the cold.
Morley belched. "That woman tried to poison me. That mess wasn't fit to feed a hog."
I chuckled. He'd made only one oblique negative comment and had gotten invited to cook his own meals.
His presence didn't thrill the natives. His charm, stoked to a white heat, had been wasted on Jennifer. His feelings were hurt. He wasn't used to being looked at like something from the underside of a rock.
They didn't know who and what he was, only that he was somebody who had invaded their weird little world. Me, I'm not such a sensitive guy.
"A lovely bunch, Garrett. Truly lovely. The girl should work at an icehouse. Where do you find these people?"
"They find me. People who aren't troubled don't need me."
He grunted. There was a lot of that going around. "I understand that."
I suspect his clients are weirder than mine. But he doesn't have to deal with them on an extended basis.
I checked the telltales at the door. There'd been no sloppy visitors. We stepped inside. I said, "I'm going to take a nap. I had a hard night last night. Don't turn into a spook again."
He gave me a sour grin. "Not this time." He started unwinding a piece of cord he'd scrounged up while I was helping Cook clear supper dishes.
"What's that for?"
"To measure with. You say somebody's getting in and out without using the door, there's got to be a way." He measured off a foot of cord, tied a knot, folded the cord, tied another knot. Not a perfect ruler but it would do.
"I was going to do that myself. When I got time."
"You never get time for detail work, Garrett. You're too busy bulling around, trying to make things happen. What do you expect tonight?"
I'd hinted that we could expect some excitement. "I figure that one draug will come back. What else, who knows? Getting so I think anything can happen here. While you're fiddling around, think of a way to get Chain to give himself away."
"The fat guy with the garbage mouth?"
"That's him."
"He the baddie?"
"He's the only one I can line up who had opportunity with Hawkes and Bradon and the attempts on me."
"Turn you into bait. Catch him in the act."
"Thanks a bunch. He's screwed it up three times already. Maybe four. How many shots should I give him?"
"Take your nap. You're safe. Morley's here."
"That's not the comfort you think it should be." I went into the bedroom, shucked my clothes and slithered in between the sheets. There was something sinful about being naked in such comfort.
For about thirty seconds I listened to Morley putter, measuring and talking to himself while rain tippy-tapped on the windows. Then the lights went out.
The lights never came on. Not quite.
But there were fires to light the night. Well, there was the threat of fire, anyway.
I woke up no longer alone. My blonde friend was back. Checking my head, touching my face, all that.
This time she didn't move fast enough. But she was leaning way over, off balance, and I didn't think before I grabbed. I got her wrist and gave her a come-hither tug. She fell on top of me.