Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
William Monk 15 - Dark Assassin

William Monk 15 - Dark Assassin

Titel: William Monk 15 - Dark Assassin Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Perry
Vom Netzwerk:
her. “Afraid o’ wot?” he said gently. “Think about it too ’ard, an’ yer’ll be afraid o’ the ’ole o’ life. Bein’ ’urt, bein’ ’ungry, bein’ cold, bein’ alone. Or yer mean bein’ drownded or buried alive? Don’t think too far ahead. Just do terday.”
    “Is that what Argyll counts on? Poor Mary.”
    “Dunno,” he confessed. “But it don’t make sense like it is.”
    She did not argue, and they walked in companionable silence to the bus stop.

SIX
    M onk was standing in the kitchen when he heard Hester come in at the front door. He spun around and strode into the hall. He immediately saw how she was dressed and that her face was pinched and weary. Her hair was straggling as if she had tied it in a knot rather than bothered dressing it at all, and her sleeves and trousers were wet.
    “Where in hell have you been?” he said abruptly, alarm making his voice sharper than he had meant. He was very close to her, almost touching her. “What’s happened?”
    She did not even try to prevaricate. “I’ve been in the tunnels, with Sutton. I’m perfectly all right, but there’s something terribly wrong there,” she said, looking directly at him. “It isn’t as easy as I thought. The engines are enormous, and they’re shaking the ground. It’s nothing to do with what James Havilland or Mary discovered. They all know it’s dangerous; it’s part of the job.” Her eyes were searching his face now, looking for help, explanations to make sense of it. “They all know about the fact that there are streams underground, and wells, and that the clay slips. Hundreds of people live down there! But Mary was going from one person to another asking questions. What could she have been looking for, and why did it matter?”
    Monk forced himself to be gentle as he accompanied Hester into the warmth of the kitchen. He was not in the least domestic by nature, but he had nonetheless cleaned out the stove and relit it. With Hester’s absences in the clinic caring for the desperately ill and dying, he had been obliged to learn.
    He took her coat from her and hung it up on the peg, where it could dry. She made no attempt to be evasive, which in itself alarmed him. She must be very badly frightened. He could see it in her eyes in the brightness of the kitchen gaslight. “Where did you learn all this?” he asked.
    “The Thames Tunnel,” she answered. “Not alone!” she added hastily.
    “I was perfectly safe.” Involuntarily she shuddered, her body in a spasm of uncontrollable memory. She pushed a shaking hand through her hair.
    “William, there are people who live down there, all the time! Like…rats. They never come up to the wind or the light.”
    “I know. But it’s probably no more a root of crime than the waterside slums or the docks, places like Jacob’s Island.” He put his arms around her and held her close. “You’re not setting up any clinic for them!”
    She laughed in spite of herself, and ended up coughing. “I hadn’t even thought of it. But now that—”
    “Hester!”
    She smiled brightly at him.
    He breathed out slowly, forcing himself to be calmer. Then he put more water in the kettle and slid it onto the hob. There was fresh bread and butter and cheese, and a slice of decent cake in the pantry.
    “William…”
    He stopped and faced her, waiting.
    At last she spoke. “Mary went to all sorts of places and asked questions about rivers and clay, and how many people had been hurt, but she asked about engineers as well. And apparently she knew something about them—knew one sort from another. She took terrible risks. Either she didn’t realize, or…” Her eyes suddenly filled with tears. She was so tired her skin was white, and in spite of his holding her, she had not stopped shivering.
    “Do you think she was foolish enough to be unaware of the dangers?” he asked.
    “No,” she said in a soft, unhappy voice, but she did not pull away from him. “I think she cared about the truth so passionately that she preferred to take the risk rather than run away. I think she was afraid of a real disaster, worse than the Fleet.”
    “Because it’s in a tunnel?”
    “Fire,” she told him. “Gas pipes go up into houses aboveground as well.”
    He understood. The possibilities were terrifying. “And they know?”
    She nodded and moved back a step at last as the shivering eased. “It looks like it. She just couldn’t prove it yet. Or maybe she could. Do you think

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher