Season of Darkness
Page 1
Contents
Cover
A Selection of Recent Titles by Cora Harrison from Severn House
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
A Selection of Recent Titles by Cora Harrison from Severn House
The Gaslight mysteries
SEASON OF DARKNESS
The Reverend Mother mysteries
A SHAMEFUL MURDER
A SHOCKING ASSASSINATION
BEYOND ABSOLUTION
A GRUESOME DISCOVERY
DEATH OF A NOVICE
MURDER AT THE QUEEN’S OLD CASTLE
The Burren mysteries
WRIT IN STONE
EYE OF THE LAW
SCALES OF RETRIBUTION
DEED OF MURDER
LAWS IN CONFLICT
CHAIN OF EVIDENCE
CROSS OF VENGEANCE
VERDICT OF THE COURT
CONDEMNED TO DEATH
A FATAL INHERITANCE
AN UNJUST JUDGE
SEASON OF DARKNESS
Cora Harrison
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2019 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
Eardley House, 4 Uxbridge Street, London W8 7SY.
This eBook edition first published in 2019 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Trade paperback edition first published
in Great Britain and the USA 2019 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD.
Copyright © 2019 by Cora Harrison.
The right of Cora Harrison to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8876-1 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78029-596-1 (trade paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-4483-0215-4 (e-book)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
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For Peter Buckman, literary agent par excellence.
Persuasive, encouraging, tactful, enthusiastic, rigorous.
‘Nullus est liber tam malus, ut non aliqua parte prosit.’
ONE
‘I wouldn’t if I was you, Isabella.’ Sesina opened the door of the kitchen range and placed her shoes on its black, leaded edge, hitching up her skirt to get the warmth on her ankles. ‘You’re taking a norful risk, you are, Isabella. You know what men are like!’ But there you are, wearing your best dress and thinking everything is going to go your way. The words went silently through her head as she watched the other girl’s face, lit by the firelight that left the rest of the kitchen in almost darkness. Dead obstinate. That was Isabella.
‘I’m a match for any of them. Move over, Sesina, stop hogging the fire.’
Isabella wasn’t going to listen. Sesina knew that by the stubborn expression on her face. Oh, well, do what you want to do. Don’t say that I didn’t warn you. But she saw how Isabella gave one more look around the kitchen and seemed to breathe in its shadows, its scents of baked bread, devilled kidneys and fried haddock. Almost like she was saying goodbye to them all.
Sesina made one more effort.
‘Easy to say, Isabella. Here you are sitting in a nice warm kitchen, toasting your toes by the range. Not so brave you’d be, down beside the river in the fog. That’s what I say. That Hungerford Stairs is a creepy place at night; you know that as well as I do myself, Isabella. Why does he have to meet you there? Funny idea, that. Why can’t he meet you in the place where … well, you know …’ She finished there, purposely letting her voice tail out. Perhaps Isabella would blurt out the name of the place where she’d met this person, where she had first told him that she knew the secret.
‘You shut up, Sesina.’
But Isabella, Sesina noticed, looked quickly over her shoulder at the pale oblong of street light that came through the basement window. Full of the jitters this evening, she was; that was sure. Her gaze kept flickering along the dresser shelves, kept being attracted by the light on the copper pans, on the stone bottles of prunes and the glistening glass jars of mushroom catsup.
‘Told you! You’re scared, ain’t you? You can’t fool me, Isabella,’ she said aloud.
‘Mind your own business, Sesina!’ Isabella, as usual, was working herself into one of her furies, her voice sharp and shrill. Angry. That was her. Always ready to fly off a handle. Spitting out the words again, her voice shaking this time, ‘Just you mind your own business, Sesina.’
She had seen something nasty in that fellow. That would be it. Isabella was as sharp as a needle. Should be a bit more sensible, now, but money had come into it. Money and the idea of a nice, easy life. No good talking to her when she had that on her mind.
‘Do what you like. Don’t care,’ said Sesina with a shrug. Luxuriously, she hitched her skirt up above her knees and placed her shoes on top of the range. Nothing like the heat of the fire on the calves of the legs. Took all the tiredness out of them. She reached down a poker and rattled the coals. Isabella was always stubborn. There was no arguing with her. One of those who never knew which side her bread was buttered on.
‘He knows I wasn’t born yesterday. As soon as I told him that I knew all about it, he changed his tune pretty smart; I can tell you that. It’ll be all right.’ But there was definitely a slight shake in Isabella’s voice. Sesina gave her a sharp look. Biting her nails, she was. It’d been a long time since Isabella had bitten her nails. Had done it that night when they had nowhere to go, no place to sleep.
‘What did you tell him?’
‘You’d like to know, wouldn’t you, Sesina. Mind you, there’s a lot of guesswork in it. But I wasn’t born yesterday. I just hinted at a few things, told him one or two of the things that I’ve found out and …’
‘And then?’
‘Well then, tonight, I’ll tell him the rest. Show him what I’ve got. Then it’ll be his turn, won’t it? Told him what I wanted, didn’t I? Some nice little lodgings and money punctual, every week.’
Sesina thought about it for a moment. Isabella was always one to give a smart answer, mostly a cheeky one. But would that work with a man who was being blackmailed?
‘You think that he’ll have a fit, when you tell him, don’t you? You think he’ll be kneeling at your feet? Be beseeching you to keep quiet? Be offering you all sorts of money? Be talking about buying you a new dress, a house of your own, a carriage? That’s what you’re thinking, isn’t it?’
She waited for a reply. There was none. Isabella’s expression had not altered. She sat there, soaking up the warmth from the stove, calmer now, her face slightly pink, wholly self-satisfied, her eyes full of dreams.
Sesina looked at her with contempt. ‘You poor cow,’ she said just as one of the bells on the wall agitated convulsively. ‘Oh, drat that bell. What’s that fellow want now?’ she said.
‘I’ll go,’ said Isabella, jumping up from her chair.
‘No, you don’t; I’ve got some more to say to you.’ Sesina seized a broom. ‘There! That’s fixed it.’ One quick pull with the head of the broom and the noise had stopped. ‘Dead old, that wire. Snaps ever so easy! You sit down again, Isabella.’
‘I’ll tell the missus that you was the one that broke it.’
Isabella wouldn’t tell, really. And she knew that Sesina knew she wouldn’t. In the morning, they would both swear blind that the wire must have snapped by itself.
That’s if Isabella was still here in the morning. Sesina still couldn’t believe that this man had agreed to fix Isabella up in brand-new lodgings. And new clothes, everything. Told her not to bring anything with her and he would dress her like a lady. And then arranged this night meeting. That was suspicious, if anything was. Dead dangerous this going out at night to meet this man. And the Hungerford Stairs was a stupid place to fix for a meeting with a man that you were going to blackmail. Not a nice place even during the day. And so near to the river, too. It would be downright stupid to go there.
And then she looked at Isabella. Hair brushed. Wearing her best dress. The one that she kept for Sundays. A bit faded now, but still the red and green colours shone out and they suited Isabella, suited her dark hair and her dark eyes. No, Isabella was determined to go. She had a vision; Sesina could see that. A picture at the back of her mind of a different future. A vision of escape. And she was determined to try her luck, thought Sesina. She scuffed the stone flag beyond the stove with one down-at-heel shoe, her eyes looking down, full of dreams, most like. What more could she say, thought Sesina. Isabella would walk out of the kitchen in a few minutes. Off to meet this mystery man.
Unless she could stop her. But she didn’t think that she could. There was something about Isabella tonight. Something taut as a wire, as if she, too, would snap in two any moment, just like that wire on the wall.
Nevertheless, Sesina went back to her argument.
‘Chances are that he’ll knock you over the head and drop you down into the water. Why are you meeting him there in the dark, just beside the river if he’s going to take you to new lodgings?’
‘He’s a gentleman, ain’t he? He don’t want to be seen talking to me in broad daylight, with everyone looking on. Use your loaf, Sesina.’
‘I still think that you’re taking a norful risk. Why don’t you get someone, someone else, to talk to him?’
‘Like who?’
Sesina knew that question would come, but she said nothing, half-hoping that the same name would come to Isabella. Better if it did. ‘No one can tell you nothing,’ she said aloud.
‘Well, go on then. Go on. Say it. Who can I get to talk to him for me?’
‘What about Mrs Morson … or him, you—’
‘Mr Dickens? What made you think of him? You mad or wot? You know what would happen? He’d be down to this place like a ton of bricks. Talking to the missus. “Very bad character, these girls. She’d blacken a nunnery.” That’s what your precious Mr Dickens said about me and I wouldn’t like to tell you what he said about you, Sesina.’
‘But if Mr Dickens did help you, he’d advise you. After all, if you’ve really found out something, something worth money, something you know about him, something that he’d give anything to hide, you needn’t say the name to Mr Dickens, just ask his advice …’
‘I’ve got something on him all right, but I’m not having that Mr Dickens interfering. After all my work in tracking down this fellow. I can just imagine what Mr High-and-Mighty Dickens would say. I know what he’s like. If he did help me … Mind, I say, if, well, you know what he’s like, don’t you? He’d take over. Might get money, but would he give it to me? Not him. Would use the money to put me to school or something, send me off to Australia. Would be like that Urania Cottage place all over again and getting lessons like we was little kids or something. Nah, I just want money from this fellow. Don’t want nothing to do with the law or anything like that.’
‘Tell us his name. Go on, Isabella, you might as well, an’ then if anything happens to you, I’d be able to get the peelers on to him if he strangles you or something. That ’ud be some satisfaction, wouldn’t it?’
‘No, I’m not telling you his name, or nothing about him. I know you, Sesina, you’d be in there like a flash, you’d be after him with your hand out, getting your cut, and chances are that you’d spoil everything. No, you keep your nose out of everything. I’ll be a rich lady and have my own carriage, just you mark my words.’
‘If he gives you enough money to buy a place of your own, can I come, too?’ Stupid, said Sesina to herself, just one of those daydreams that they had sometimes, chatting together by the fire. What would you do if you was a lady? But there was something about Isabella that made you think that she knew what she was talking about.
‘I might consider you for a scullery maid, consider, mind you. Of course, you would have to address me as Madam. That would have to be the way of it.’
‘Ta, ever so. I’ll stay where I am.’ Be better off, too, thought Sesina. Easy place this! Easy enough to fool Mrs Dawson. Dead stupid, she was. Pretend that the cat got the cheese; that the fishmonger gave short weight; that the crack in the window was caused by the errand boys throwing stones into the basement area; the missus was dead stupid and would swallow everything. Isabella would be a different matter. She’d know all the tricks. Still, I’d have something to hold over her.
Aloud, she said, ‘Here’s the missus. I suppose that Mr High-and-Mighty’s been complaining that the bell doesn’t work. Quick, start scrubbing that soup kettle. She was on about that earlier.’ Sesina, herself, energetically seized the handle of the knife polisher and started it whirling as Mrs Dawson waddled in and looked around the kitchen with a beaming smile. Sesina relaxed. Been at the lawyer’s gin, again. Always did put the missus in a good humour. Sesina had heard Mr Doyle complaining about the level in the bottle going down so fast. Mrs Dawson hadn’t let him get away with it though. Called on Sesina to witness that the bottle had been three-quarters empty when she had cleaned his room the day before. And, of course, for good measure, Sesina had sworn blind that there was even less than a quarter in the bottle first thing that morning; that she had noticed it immediately.
‘Off to bed with you, girls,’ said Mrs Dawson, suppressing a hiccup. ‘The gentlemen have all turned out their lights, now. Off to bed, you’ll need to be up early. The sweep’s coming. One of you will have to let them in at five o’clock. We don’t want them getting in the way of the breakfasts, do we? Which one of you? Want to toss for it?’
‘I’ll do it, Mrs Dawson. I’ll let the sweep in.’ Just as though butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth.
Sesina looked at Isabella suspiciously. Perhaps she was going to be out all night. Downright dangerous that would be. Up to something, anyway.
‘So off you go to bed, now, girls. Good night.’
‘Good night, Mrs Dawson.’ Sesina waited until the footsteps went back up the stairs again before saying, once more. ‘I wouldn’t if I was you, Isabella.’
‘Yes
, but you’re not me, are you? You have no ambition, that’s what’s wrong with you, Sesina. I don’t want to be a slavey all my life, do I? Sitting here in this basement. Not even a proper window. Look at that cheeky bugger trying to get a look at us. Go away, get away, you little guttersnipe! The wheel of that cart will roll over him if he’s not careful. Pull down the blind, Sesina.’
But she did it herself, rapping sharply on the window and then pulling a face at the boy. Wound up like a clock, she was, thought Sesina. She looked across as Isabella went back over to the door. No good saying any more. Pig-headed. Always was. That was Isabella. Always crying for the moon. She shrugged her shoulders as Isabella took down her shawl from behind the door.
‘I’m off now, Sesina. How do I look in my best dress? Want to look good for the gentleman, don’t I? Suits me that dress. Mr Dickens picked out the material. I remember him coming when I was sewing it. “Red and green are just right for you, Isabella,” that’s what he said, so he did.’ She pulled a bundle from behind the dresser and stepped out into the passageway outside. Sesina waited with a half smile, waited to hear Isabella rattle that locked door, but all she heard were soft rapid footsteps climbing the stairs to the upper basement.
TWO
Wilkie Collins, Basil:
The evening, I remember, was still and cloudy; the London air was at its heaviest; the distant hum of the street-traffic was at its faintest; the small pulse of the life within me, and the great heart of the city around me, seemed to be sinking in unison, languidly and more languidly, with the sinking sun.
Dickens and I had walked forth from my lodgings in Lincoln’s Inn; through the quiet gardens of Temple Inn; then along the side of the river. It was the hour of dead tide; the slime and ooze stained the foreshore and birds picked busily among the filth. We did not speak; we watched the lazy roll of the water, listened to the cries of the seagulls; each of us immersed deeply within our different worlds of fantastical creation; until, silently, we turned away from the river and into a muddy alley. It was dark there, almost too dark for walking, but we rounded a corner and saw a blue lamp flaring with a cold, clean light in the murky air and casting the black shadow of a man in a top hat on to the white building. I started. I remember that. Somehow it gave me a shock; as though it were an ill omen, a devil coming with bad news.