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William Monk 05 - The Sins of the Wolf

William Monk 05 - The Sins of the Wolf

Titel: William Monk 05 - The Sins of the Wolf Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Perry
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of no reason why he should have wished to kill his mother-in-law. And the youngest brother, Kenneth, who seems our best hope at the moment.”
    “What about the daughter in London?” Henry asked.
    “She cannot have been guilty,” Rathbone reasoned with a sharp edge to his voice. “She was nowhere near Edinburgh or Mary, or the medicine. We can discount her and her husband.”
    “Why was Mary going to visit her?” Henry asked, ignoring Rathbone’s tone.
    “I don’t know. Something to do with her health. She is expecting her first child and is very nervous. It’s natural enough she should wish her mother to be there.”
    “Is that all you know?”
    “Do you think it would matter?” Callandra asked urgently.
    “No, of course not.” Rathbone dismissed it with a sharp flick of his hand. He stood leaning a little against the table, still unwilling to sit down.
    Henry ignored his reply. “Have you given any thought as to why Mrs. Farraline was killed at that precise time, rather than any other?” he asked.
    “Opportunity,” Rathbone replied. “A perfect chance to lay the blame on someone else. I would have thought that was obvious.”
    “Perhaps,” Henry agreed dubiously, resting his elbows on the arms of the chair and pressing his fingertips together in a steeple. “But it seems to me also very possible that somethingprovoked it at this precise time. You do not kill someone simply because a good opportunity presents itself.”
    Rathbone straightened up, at last a tiny spot of instinct caught inside him.
    “Have you something in mind?”
    “Surely it is worth giving close examination to anything that happened within three or four days immediately before Mrs. Farraline set out for London?” Henry asked. “The murder may have been an opportunist act after years of desire, but it may also have been precipitated by something that happened very shortly before.”
    “Indeed it may,” Rathbone agreed, moving away from the table. “Thank you, Father. At last we have another avenue to explore. That is, if Monk has not already done it and found it empty. But he said nothing.”
    “Are you sure you cannot see Hester?” Callandra asked quickly.
    “Yes I am sure, but I shall be in court, of course, and I may be permitted a few moments then.”
    “Please …” Callandra was very pale. Suddenly all the emotion they had been trying so hard to smother beneath practical action, intelligence and self-control poured into the silence in the warm, unfamiliar room, with its anonymous furnishings and smell of polish.
    Rathbone stared at Callandra, then at his father. The understanding between them was complete; all the fear, the affection, the knowledge of loss hanging over them, the helplessness were too clear to need words.
    “Of course I’ll tell her,” Rathbone said quietly. “But she knows already.”
    “Thank you,” Callandra said.
    Henry nodded his head.
    The morning of the trial was cold, sharp and threatening rain. Oliver Rathbone walked briskly from the rooms he had taken just off Princes Street, up the steps of the mound towards the castle, then up Bank Street and sharp left ontothe High Street. Almost immediately he was faced with the great Cathedral of St. Giles, half hiding Parliament Square, on the farther side of which was Parliament House, unused now since the Act of Union, and the High Court of Justiciary.
    He crossed the square. No one knew or recognized him. He passed newspaper sellers not only pressing their news of today but promising all sorts of scandal and revelation for the next issue. The murderess of Mary Farraline was on trial. Read all about it. Learn the secrets known only to a few. Incredible stories for the price of a penny.
    He walked past them impatiently. He had heard all these things before, but they had not hurt when it was only a client. It was to be expected and brushed aside. When it was Hester it had a power to wound in quite a new way.
    He went up the steps, and even there, amid the black-gowned barristers, he was unknown. It was surprisingly disorienting. He was accustomed to recognition, even considerable respect, to younger men moving aside for him in deference, muttering to each other of his past successes, hoping to emulate them one day.
    Here he was merely another spectator, albeit one who might sit near the front and occasionally pass a note to the counsel for the defense.
    He had already made arrangements and obtained permission to see Hester for a few

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