Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
William Monk 04 - A Sudden Fearful Death

William Monk 04 - A Sudden Fearful Death

Titel: William Monk 04 - A Sudden Fearful Death Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Perry
Vom Netzwerk:
evade it any longer.”
    The blood drained from his face, leaving him ashen. The dark circles around his eyes stood out like bruises. His voice when he spoke was very quiet and the strain was naked in it.
    “Tell me.”
    This was even worse than she had thought. He looked so stricken, like a man facing sentence.
    “You look very tired …” she began, then was furious with herself. It was a stupid observation, and pointless.
    The sad ghost of a smile touched his mouth.
    “Sir Herbert has been absent some time. I am doing what I can to care for his patients, but with them as well as my own it is hard.” He shook his head minutely. “But that is unimportant. Tell me what you can of your health. What pain do you have? What signs that disturb you?”
    How stupid of her. Of course he was tired—he must be exhausted, trying to do Sir Herbert’s job as well as his own.She had not even thought of that. Neither had any of the other governors, so far as she knew. What a group of incompetents they were! All they had spoken of when they met was the hospital’s reputation.
    And he had assumed she was ill—naturally. Why else would she consult him with trembling body and husky voice?
    “I am not ill,” she said, meeting his eyes with apology and pain. “I am troubled by fear and conscience.” At last it was said, and it was the truth, no evasions. She loved him. It eased her to admit it in words, without evasion at last. She stared at his face with all its intelligence, passion, humor, and sensuality. Whatever he had done, that could not suddenly be torn out. If it came out at all, it would leave a raw wound, like the roots of a giant tree ripping out of the soil, upheaving all the land around it.
    “By what?” he asked, staring at her. “Do you know something about Prudence Barrymore’s death?”
    “I don’t think so—I hope not….”
    “Then what?”
    This was the moment.
    “A short while ago,” she began, “I accidentally intruded on you while you were performing an operation. You did not see or hear me, and I left without speaking.” He was watching her with a small pucker of concern between his brows. “I recognized the patient,” she went on. “It was Marianne Gillespie, and I fear that the operation was to abort the child she was carrying.” She did not need to go on. She knew from his face, the total lack of surprise or horror in it, that it was true. She tried to numb herself so she would not feel the pain inside. She must distance herself from him, realize that she could not love a man who had done such things, not possibly. This abominable hurt would not last!
    “Yes it was,” he said, and there was neither guilt nor fear in his eyes. “She was with child as a result of rape by her brother-in-law. She was in the very early stages, less than six weeks.” He looked sad and tired, and there was fear ofhurt in his face, but not shame. “I have performed abortions on several occasions before,” he said quietly, “when I have been consulted early enough, in the first eight or ten weeks, and the child is a result of violence or the woman is very young indeed, sometimes even less than twelve years old—or if she is in such a state of ill health that to bear the child would, in my judgment, cost her her own life. Not in any other circumstances and not ever for payment.” She wanted to interrupt him and say something, but her throat was too tight, her lips stiff. “I am sorry if that is abhorrent to you.” A ghost of a smile touched his mouth. “Very sorry indeed. You must know how deeply I care for you, although it has never been right that I should tell you, since I am not free to offer you anything honorable—but whatever you feel about it, I have thought long and deeply. I have even prayed.” Again the self-mocking humor flashed and disappeared. “And I believe it to be right—acceptable before God. I believe in those cases a woman has the right to choose. I cannot change that, even for you.”
    Now she was terrified for him. He would be caught, and that would mean professional ruin and imprisonment. She was aching inside with the tension of fear.
    “Victoria Stanhope,” she said huskily, her heart full of memories of a girl in a pink dress, her face drawn, her eyes full of hope, and then despair. She had to know this one last thing, and then dismiss it forever. “Did you operate on her?”
    His face shadowed with grief.
    “No. I would have, since the child was the result of

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher