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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
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stupidity.
    “I beg your pardon?” she stammered.
    He was surprised. “I said ‘Good morning,’ ” he repeated. “Are you well?” He looked at her more closely. “Has that wretched policeman been bothering you?”
    “No.” She smiled in sudden relief. It was ridiculous. She could have dealt with Jeavis without a hesitation in her stride. Good heavens, she was a match for Monk, let alone one of Runcorn’s junior minions appointed in his stead. “No,” she said again. “Not at all. But I am concerned about his efficiency. I fear he may not be as capable of the skill as this unhappy case requires.”
    Kristian gave a twisted smile. “He is certainly diligent enough. He has already questioned me three times, and to judge from his expression, believed nothing I said.” He gave a sad little laugh. “I think he suspects me.”
    She caught the edge of fear in his voice, and pretended she had not, then changed her mind and met his eyes. She longed to be able to touch him, but she did not know how much he felt, or knew. And this was hardly the time.
    “He will be eager to prove himself by solving the case as quickly and satisfactorily as possible,” she said with an effort at composure. “And he has a superior with social ambitions and a keen sense of what is politically judicious.” She saw his face tighten as he appreciated exactly what she meant, and the consequent danger to himself as a foreigner and a man with no social connections in England. “But I have a friend, a private inquiry agent,” she went on hastily, aching to reassure him. “I have engaged him to look into the case. He is quite brilliant. He will find the truth.”
    “You say that with great confidence,” he observed quietly, halfway between amusement and a desperate need to believe her.
    “I have known him for some time and seen him solve cases the police could not.” She searched his face, the anxiety in his eyes, the smile on his lips belying it. “He is a hard man, ruthless, and sometimes arrogant,” she went on intently. “But he has imagination and brilliance, and he has absolute integrity. If anyone can find the truth, it will be Monk.” She thought of the past cases through which shehad known him and felt a surge of hope. She made herself smile and saw an answering flicker in Kristian’s eyes.
    “If he has your confidence to that degree, then I must rest my trust in him also,” he replied.
    She wanted to say something further, but nothing came to her mind that was not forced. Rather than appear foolish, she excused herself and walked away to look for Mrs. Flaherty, to discuss some charitable business.
    Hester found returning to hospital duty after private nursing a severe strain on her temper. She had grown accustomed to being her own mistress since her dismissal roughly a year ago. The restrictions of English medical practice were almost beyond bearing after the urgency and freedom of the Crimea, where there had frequently been so few army surgeons that nurses such as herself had had to take matters into their own hands, and there had been little complaint. Back at home again it seemed that every pettifogging little rule was invoked, more to safeguard dignity than to ease pain or preserve life, and that reputation was more precious than discovery.
    She had known Prudence Barrymore and she felt a sharply personal sense of both anger and loss at her death. She was determined to give Monk any assistance she could in learning who had killed her. Therefore she would govern her temper, however difficult that might prove; refrain from expressing her opinions, no matter how severely tempted; and not at any time exercise her own medical judgment.
    So far she had succeeded, but Mrs. Flaherty tried her sorely. The woman was set in her ways. She refused to listen to anyone’s instructions about opening windows, even on the warmest, mildest days. Twice she had told the nurses to put a cloth over buckets of slops as they were carrying them out, but when they had forgotten on all subsequent occasions she had said nothing further. Hester, as a disciple of Florence Nightingale, was passionately keen on fresh air to cleanse the atmosphere and carry away harmful effluvia and unpleasant odor. Mrs. Flaherty was terrified of chillsand preferred to rely on fumigation. It was with the greatest of difficulty that Hester kept her own counsel.
    Instinctively she liked Kristian Beck. There seemed to be both compassion and imagination in

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