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William Monk 06 - Cain His Brother

William Monk 06 - Cain His Brother

Titel: William Monk 06 - Cain His Brother Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Perry
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poor to do it themselves. That’s hardly a comfort to anyone.” She looked across at Enid and frowned. “They also died because they are half starved and cold all winter, half of them have rickets or tuberculosis, or are stunted by some other childhood disease. But you can hardly put on a tombstone, if you had one, that they died of having been born in the wrong time and place. Are you all right? You don’t look well.”
    “I have a headache,” Enid confessed. “I thought I was just tired, but I do feel rather worse now than I did before I sat down. I thought I was hot, but perhaps I’m cold. I’m sorry—I sound ridiculous.…”
    Hester stood up and crossed the short space between them, bending down in front of Enid, searching her face, her eyes. She reached up her hand and placed it on her brow. It was burning.
    “Is it …?” Enid whispered, the question too dreadful to ask.
    Hester nodded. “Come on. I’ll take you home.”
    “But …” Enid began, then realized it was pointless. She clambered to her feet, swayed, and buckled at the knees. Hester and Callandra only just caught her in time to ease her back down into the chair.
    “You must go home,” Callandra said firmly. “We can manage here.”
    “But I can’t just leave!” Enid argued. “There’s so much to do! I …”
    “Yes you can.” Callandra forced a smile; there was tiredness, patience and a deep grief in it. She touched Enid very gently, but without the least indecision. “You will only distract us here, because we can’t look after you as we would wish. Hester will take you.”
    “But …” Enid swallowed hard and began to writhe deeply, gasping, and in obvious distress. “I’m sorry … I think I may be sick.”
    Callandra looked across and met Hester’s eyes.
    “Fetch a pail,” she ordered. “Then go and tell Mary. You’d better find a hansom and bring it back here.”
    “Of course.” There was nothing to discuss or with which to take issue. She went into the main room and returned within seconds with a pail, then went to find Mary, who was up at the far end of the room, sponging down a woman who was almost insensible with fever. The rush torches on the walls threw shifting shadows over the straw and the dim shapes of bodies under the blankets. There were no sounds but the rustling of feverish movement and the murmurs and cries of delirium, and close to the windows, the thrumming of the rain outside.
    “I fink she’s a little better,” Mary said hopefully when she realized Hester was beside her.
    “Good.” Hester did not argue. “Lady Ravensbrook’s got the fever now. I’m going to find a hansom to take her home. Lady Callandra will stay here, and Dr. Beck will beback later this evening. See what you can do about some more wood. Alf said there was some rotten timber on the dockside. It’ll be wet, but if we stick it in here it may dry out a bit. It will spark badly, but in the stoves that won’t matter.”
    “Yes, miss. I …”
    “What?”
    “I’m sorry about Lady Ravensbrook.” Mary’s face was pinched with concern. Hester could see it even in this uncertain light. “That’s a real shame.” Mary shook her head. “Didn’t think a strong lady like that’d catch it. You take care, miss. In’t much ter you neither.” She looked up and down Hester’s rather thin figure with kindly honesty. “Yer ain’t got much ter fight agin it wif. You lose ’alf yer weight an’ there won’t be nuffink left.”
    Hester did not agree with that piece of logic, but she did not argue. She pulled her shawl closer around herself and retraced her steps back between the straw beds and the entrance, and went down the stairs to the outside door and the street.
    Outside was pitch-dark and gusting rain on the blustery wind. The solitary gas lamp just around the corner shed a haze of light through the rain, guiding her towards Park Place. She would probably have to round the narrow Limehouse Causeway up to the West India Dock Road before she could find a hansom. She pulled her shawl tighter around herself and bent her head against the rain. It was less than half a mile.
    She passed several people. It was still early evening and men were returning from work in factories, dockyards and warehouses. One or two nodded to her as their paths crossed in the misty arc of a streetlight. She had become a familiar figure to far too many who knew or loved someone stricken with typhoid, but to most she was just another

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