Angels of Darkness
reluctantly.
A soft name for such a strong woman! âWell, Alma, I apologize in advance if I hurt you. Now letâs get this taken care of.â
In less than an hour, I had wrapped her foot, helped her sit at the table long enough to eat a meal, and supported her as she hobbled into a small bedroom that opened off the kitchen. She did most of the work of stripping off her clothes and pulling on a nightshirt, but the exertion cost her a great deal; her face was drawn with pain by the time she lowered herself to the bed.
I glanced around as if looking for any final chores I should take care of. âNow, Iâll just bring dinner to the angel and then come down and clean up the dishes,â I said in a matter-of-fact voice. âThen tomorrowââ
âWhat did you say?â she interrupted.
I gave her my most innocent look. âIâll take dinner to the angelââ
For the first time, she looked both nonplussed and alarmed. âHow do you knowâwhy do you thinkââ
âIâve seen him. At night, on the roof. Heard him, a couple of times. I donât know whatâs wrong with him, but I assume heâs come here for help or healing. And maybe he can make it down two flights of steps to feed himself dinner and maybe he canât.â I tilted my head to one side and watched her, my expression inquiring. Well? Can he ? And if he canât, will you let him go hungry?
Her green eyes burned as she stared back at me, and I watched her internal struggle play out on her face. Clearly this was not a woman who easily betrayed a trust, but she could not reconcile her two warring mandates: Take care of the angel and Keep the angelâs existence a secret. But, really, she had no choice, and I saw the capitulation in her face a second before she spoke.
âAll right. Take a tray of food to him on the third floor. He drinks water with his meal, no wine. Bring down his dirty dishes from breakfast. If he needs something else, heâll ask for it, but donât speak to him first.â
I knew the answer already, but I wanted my guess confirmed before I actually risked showing my face to an angel. So I asked, âWonât he wonder why Iâm bringing him dinner instead of you?â
She shook her head and eased herself back onto her pillows. There were a lot of them. The bed was surprisingly plush, given her situation and the severe plainness of the rest of the room. I liked the thought that she allowed herself a single indulgence. âNo,â she said, âheâs blind.â
I had to turn away to hide my smile. âIâll be back in a few moments,â I told her as I stepped into the kitchen again. I was so delighted with the way my plan had gone so far that I was almost humming as I fixed up a platter.
It turns out itâs not easy to carry a heavy tray up two flights if the stairs are narrow and twisty and the only illumination is a small lamp you added to your tray at the last moment, when you realized the house was too old and remote to run on gaslight. I was a little breathless when I arrived at the attic level and found myself in a narrow corridor that ran along one side of the house. Three doors led off the hallway; the two that were closed I guessed to be a bedroom and a closet. The third one stood open in a rather gloomy invitation into what appeared to be a large sitting room. It seemed to take up most of the top story and to be intended as a public space, so I stepped inside with assumed confidence.
A quick look around showed me shadowy groupings of chairs and small tables, boarded-up windows, and a curving iron staircase that had to lead to the roof. In one corner, a large stringed instrument leaned against a wall. There appeared to be stacks of books and papers on the floor, though they were disordered, as if no one had touched them in a long time.
In the center of the room, not quite facing me, was the angel. He was sprawled in one of those special cutaway chairs designed to accommodate angel wings, though he sat in it so carelessly that he appeared to be in danger of slipping out and crashing to the floor. His head was flung back to rest on the top of the padded back; his wings puddled on either side of him like dirty garments he had cast off after a tiring day. It was hard to tell by lamplight, but the clothes he was actually wearing appeared soiled as well. His white shirt looked wrinkled and stained, and his
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