Marc headed for Merriwether’s room, where he had left his own boots, tunic, and accoutrements, but halted outside the door with the wedge of light under it. Perhaps Mrs. Thed-ford was sitting just beyond it at the little davenport-table that served as her desk, working on the company’s books or revising the playbill for Detroit or completing the travel arrangements that her murdered colleague would have handled. He felt she was someone he could talk to about matters too painful and complex to be uttered to oneself. He raised his hand to give a one-finger tap on the door, but as his palm brushed it on the way up, it swung silently open. The room was fully lit, but empty. Surely she had not gone to bed in the other room and left half a dozen candles blazing here? But, then, perhaps she had merely gone into that room to fetch something and, overcome by physical and emotional fatigue, had put her head on the pillow and fallen into a deep sleep. He decided he would just take a quick peek inside, then snuff the candles and leave quietly.
He was almost at the bedroom doorway when he heard the sound: a giggle-muted, smothered perhaps, but clearly a giggle. The hair rose on the back of his neck. He listened intently, but did not move. There was a rustling, as of starched sheets. Then a sigh that had no sadness in it. He should have wheeled and bolted, but he didn’t. Like a moth to the flame, he was drawn into that doorway and a sight that first mystified and then seared him.
No candle lit the scene on the bed, but the last of the moonlight bathed it visible and shimmeringly surreal. At first blush, it was a silken knot of tawny limbs, intertwined and serpentine. Then a flash of toe, a whipped wisp of hair, a bulb of surprised flesh confirmed the human form-or forms. The willful moans of surrender, the muzzled grunts of pleasure-pain, the yip at forbidden touch would have conjured in any viewer’s imagination the lustful conjunction of male and female in the oldest act. But what Marc saw, and his mind at first rejected, was the sexual entanglement of woman and woman: Tessa Guildersleeve and Annemarie Thedford.
They were far too engrossed to notice Marc’s shadow fall across the bed, then retreat. Marc did not realize until he had backed across the outer room and sat down on the settee there that he had neglected to take a breath. He was sure they would now hear him gasping, but the moans and sighs continued apace, slowing and receding gradually as the minutes ticked by. Mrs. Thedford’s voice became distinguishable: a sequence of soothing sounds above the grateful mewling of the girl. Marc sat stunned. Yet despite the almost visceral revulsion he felt, the tenderness and consolation in the sounds from that room were undeniably those of love’s afterglow-not the satiate wheezes of lust’s exhaustion. That Annemarie Thedford loved Tessa Guildersleeve was unashamedly revealed.
His mind began to work again. He found himself staring across the room at the commode where Mrs. Thedford kept the only gifts her father had bequeathed her. In a flash, he realized what he had overlooked the day before, and he knew what instrument had stunned Merriwether and made the horrific stabbing possible. Before him was a plausible motive for what he had known all along was a murder committed in the white heat of rage and recrimination. He did not know entirely how the crime had been orchestrated, but he knew for certain who had committed it.
“Ah, Marc. I thought that was you in the doorway. I’m glad you decided to wait.”
Mrs. Thedford was standing across from him, her nakedness swathed in a satin robe, and she was smiling a welcome at him, as if he had arrived a bit early for tea and had happily made himself at home.
“Where are the silver candlesticks, the ones you claimed were so dear to you?”
“I was sure you’d notice sooner or later; nothing much gets past you,” she said, and it sounded for all the world like a compliment.
“There was one here when I searched the room yesterday. If I hadn’t been so obsessed with finding the laudanum, I would have realized it then.”
“Ah, so it was you who’d been in here. You didn’t quite place the hand-mirror or the candlestick back where I always leave them.”
“You hid the other one, didn’t you?”
She smiled warmly. “Silly of me, wasn’t it? I should have tucked them both out of sight.” There was no bitterness in this remark: it was a plain statement.
“You have no idea how much I’ve admired you …” Marc said, his voice nearly breaking.
“And I, you,” she said, pulling a padded chair over beside the settee and sitting down to face him. “And now you’ve come to accuse me of murdering Jason, and I can see the pain it is causing you.”
“I don’t know how you did it, but I know it was you,” Marc said softly, looking away, afraid of what might next be said or done.
“Don’t be so disconsolate, Marc. Of course I did it. And I was positive it would be you who would find me out.” She was gazing upon him with admiration and a plaintive sort of fondness.
“You admit it, then?”
“I do. And now I’d like you to wipe that disappointment off your handsome face and relax, have a glass of sherry with me-sans laudanum-and we’ll discuss everything.”
All Marc could think of replying to this unexpected invitation was, “What about Tessa?”
Mrs. Thedford laughed. “The minute I’ve finished making love to her, she starts snoring like a hedgehog.”
They were sitting very close together, almost knee to knee, sipping sherry like two old friends after a long absence. Mrs. Thedford did not take her eyes off Marc, even as she tipped her sherry glass to her lips. Her seeming unconcern and aplomb were as unnerving as they were incredible.
“I suggest that you go first, Marc. Tell me all you think you know.” She sat back, smiling encouragement. Marc collected his thoughts.
“I believe you heard Tessa cry out when she was attacked by Merriwether, and thinking logically that it was Rick Hilliard behaving abominably, you grabbed a candlestick and ran down the hall into Tessa’s room. There you discovered Merriwether in his nightshirt on top of a helpless Tessa who, already drugged and disoriented, had mercifully passed out. You did what any responsive person would have done: you struck Merriwether on the back of the skull with the only weapon you had, the candlestick. He reared up, still conscious for an instant, spun around, then collapsed on the carpet, faceup and legs splayed, but still breathing. Enraged by his actions-after all, he had just violated in the most reprehensible manner possible a young woman who was not merely your ward but your … paramour-you decided to finish him off. This was a decision taken in a fury, totally irrational and utterly unlike anything you had ever done or thought to do.”
“You are very generous.” She seemed amused by this quaint narrative.
“You could have struck him again with the candlestick, but I suspect the fact that he was facing you may have caused you to hesitate. It was then that you spotted Rick slumped unconscious on the settee. There was only one candle lit beside Tessa’s bed, and in your fear for Tessa you had not seen him. He had foolishly strapped on his sabre to impress Tessa. You pulled it from its scabbard, gripped it with both hands, steeled yourself, and plunged it into Merriwether’s chest. Then, the deed done, you were suddenly horrified at what you’d done. Tessa was unconscious and breathing regularly. You had to place the blame elsewhere if you were to survive and help her through this crisis. Somehow you smeared blood all over poor Hilliard, picked up your candlestick, and ran. I’m certain that the weapon is still in this building and can be found.