Cecily raised a hand to ward off objections that were not voiced. “No, I do not overstate my reaction. She was a woman of sudden rages. I’ve seen her badly mishandle her unfortunate mounts when her pride was at stake. I’ve witnessed her slashing a stable lad in the face with her whip. I know that she was overly harsh in her dealings with the cottagers. Adam Hunnyton and I have, too often, had to step in and repair, reinstate, reimburse … smooth feathers. I knew her to be—we all knew her to be—a cruel, bullying woman with what my dear husband would have called ‘a short fuse.’ I honestly thought she was capable of pushing someone downstairs or out of a window. And her target on this occasion was quite small and easily pushed, poor child. I’m sure no one would seriously blame her if she took steps to protect herself from an onslaught by Lavinia.”
Yes, compared with the Amazon proportions of Lavinia, Dorcas was quite small. In fact she was all the things Cecily was telling him. He could hear no misrepresentation or exaggeration in what she had to say. But was Dorcas a killer? A cunning and ruthless killer who might judge that the world would be a better place without Lavinia’s boots trampling it? Who might devise just such a righteous death under the hooves of an animal she had no respect or love for? Joe was shocked that he had even allowed the monstrous thought to take shape and twitch with life.
At least he was one step ahead of Cecily. He knew where she was heading with her comments. Deviously, disarmingly, towards putting the blame on Dorcas and then cancelling out the consequences. All this hocus pocus had been put on with the aim of taking Dorcas off the scene, if the worst came to the worst, on an accusation of murder. Had Cecily any idea of the girl’s connection with the police officer she was now confiding in? He could have sworn she hadn’t. Their names were in no way connected. Any relationship James Truelove was aware of had been explained to him by the devious Dorcas herself. Joe remembered Truelove had actually had him called to the telephone on one occasion to offer him advice on handling her. “You’ll get the best out of Miss Joliffe if you don’t run her in blinkers, Sandilands,” he’d told Joe briskly. Truelove probably connected him to Dorcas through her closeness to his sister, Lydia, and her family. After all, she’d lived with them in something approaching harmony for eight years. She loved them and they loved her like a daughter. “My guardians,” was her way of referring to Lydia and Marcus.
Perhaps that was the plain truth? Perhaps, all these years, he had been peripheral to Dorcas’s life and not, as he’d fancied himself, central to it? A truly distant but, on occasion, useful uncle?
The thought startled and disturbed him.
Cecily was finding it increasingly difficult to continue but responded to Joe’s concern when he prompted: “I would guess that you felt it your duty to take precautions against an outbreak of violence in the house?”
Her response had been ready to flow. “You’ll think me a fussy, deluded old woman but … but … yes, I posted a footman—Ben, who waited on us just now—at the end of the corridor outside Lavinia’s room that night. I told him to follow her, unseen, if she left her room and, if she went in the direction of the Old Nursery, which is out in the north wing well away from the other guest rooms, he was to alert me at once, even use his own judgement to prevent a catastrophe. He knew he would have had my backing. You will find Ben a trustworthy man with an ability to think for himself and anticipate a command. I shall look forward to hearing your impressions of him.”
Good Lord! The old lady had the thought processes of a damned efficient general, Joe decided. “The Old Nursery?” he questioned, mystified.
“Yes. That is where Lavinia had chosen to put her guest. Another little calculated cruelty. She showed the girl to her room herself. I can imagine why and I’m sure you can imagine why …‘This is the room James and I had decorated last week in anticipation of a joyful and long-awaited event … Yes! We are to have our happiness completed, though I must swear you to secrecy, my dear …’ I’m pretty sure she deliberately leaked news of her supposed condition. The servants were openly gossiping about it. Even my son Alexander managed to rouse himself from his stupor to ask me if I’d heard his brother’s good news. But the autopsy which James had the sense to insist on showed that it was all in her imagination or calculatedly misleading.”
“Did your footman follow her to the stables?”
“He did. Sadly not with any sense of urgency, however—Ben calculated that as she was in riding habit and heading for the horses, she was about to take her early morning ride a little earlier than usual and that his responsibility was at an end.”
Joe understood. A footman’s territory did not extend into the grounds. Their polished shoes venture no further than the tiled floor of the dairy.
“Ben knew he’d been posted to protect a guest from her ladyship. He had no instruction to protect her ladyship from her own folly. He was merely doing what I’d told him to do, staying out of sight whilst ensuring that she didn’t double back and become again a threat to her guest. I have not blamed him. Nor should you. He stopped to have a chat with a kitchen maid who was lighting the fires. However, when he heard the commotion he ran to investigate. Too late. He stayed at the scene, although in terror of the horse, and sent the two stable lads she’d coerced into accompanying her back to the house to raise the alarm. The vet and the doctor were instantly called while Ben stayed on guard over the body.”
“Brave chap,” Joe murmured. “What a scene!”
“But why, Sandilands? Why? And why am I so certain that her death was no accident? It was all so out of character. Visiting the farm horses before breakfast without notifying the head horseman? Madness!”
“I can explain all that,” said Joe. “But I agree with you that she was put up to it, her foray into the stable of an injured and aggressive horse calculatedly risky.”
She listened quietly as he told her of his interview with the vet’s daughter, her evidence and theories, and the conclusion he and Hunnyton, pooling their knowledge of horse-craft, had arrived at.
“Horse witchery? How very medieval!” Cecily had listened entranced, entertained, aghast. “Not sure that I can accept all you tell me, but … it does make a certain awful sense,” she said finally. “And I would always listen with attention to your two advisers. Hunnyton is shrewd and sound and the best authority I know on the handling of horses. His father Hunnybun, whom I knew, was deeply involved with ‘gentling,’ as they call breaking-in horses down here, and I’m sure the son absorbed his knowledge. I have met Doctor Hartest. A sensible young woman with her wits about her. Attractive and personable too. I’d rather marked her down for my Alex.” She sighed. “I’ve given up hope of his ever securing a rich, well-bred girl so he might as well have a competent woman who’ll understand his condition and care for him.”
Joe managed to reply affably, “Splendid idea! We men all dream of marrying our nurse.” He resolved to find out—but not from the boy’s own mother—exactly what condition was so dire the suffering Alex was thought to need a lifetime’s care from a physician.
Cecily’s hostess’s mind was still running on matchmaking. “We shall be a lady short for dinner tomorrow night. I wonder … Do you think Adelaide Hartest would be insulted if I sent her a last-minute invitation? Do you suppose she has evening dress down here in the country? I’ve met her once or twice in church and observed her to be neatly dressed and well spoken. Though I note she stomps around the village in dungarees and gumboots. The question is: is she a lady?”
Joe should not have been surprised or irritated by her snobbery. He reminded himself that Cecily’s attitudes had been formed in the Victorian Age and her perspective must always have been that of the minor aristocracy, constantly aware of status and class and seeking to improve or at least uphold what she saw as her family’s place in society.