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A False Mirror - Charles Todd [59]

By Root 1303 0
managed to make his way here, pray that his mind is clear. It could be your salvation.”

And with Hamish behind him, alternately warning and driving him, Rutledge set about his search.

It would be to Mallory’s advantage to bring the wounded man to his wife, Rutledge kept telling himself, since she couldn’t go to him. And yet—

He went into every room belowstairs and on the ground floor, testing the window locks, looking for signs of a break-in while Mallory slept. He searched for wet footprints on carpets and felt for damp draperies where windows might have been thrown open during the heavy rain. And he listened intently for any sounds that might tell him that Hamilton was here, and also a prisoner.

But a quarter of an hour later, he had found nothing except the irate Nan, demanding to know why she hadn’t been set free long since.

Passing Mallory where he sat on the staircase, Rutledge moved on to the first floor, methodically going from bedroom to bedroom even as he began to realize it was hopeless. Looking under beds, into wardrobes, behind screens, even behind the stiff brocade draperies that hung at each window, he tried to think where Hamilton might have gone if he hadn’t come here to Casa Miranda. But there were still the grounds to search.

The only room he didn’t enter was Mrs. Hamilton’s.

When he’d finished in the attics, he stood outside her door and tapped lightly on the panel. He had the feeling she was cowering inside, unwilling to face him.

Without Stephen Mallory’s knowledge, had she gone to the doctor’s surgery during the night and somehow managed to bring her husband back with her? It would have been a disastrous act of courage and determination even to try, and she couldn’t have moved Hamilton if he’d been unconscious still.

Mallory had to sleep sometime, although he looked as if he’d never closed his eyes. Was that her solution to the need to know how her husband fared?

And if it was, then he himself must now tread with care.

“Mayhap she doesna’ know who is at the door,” Hamish pointed out.

The room must look out to the sea and the headland on the other side of the Mole. She may not have heard his motorcar with the rain making such a racket. “It’s Inspector Rutledge, Mrs. Hamilton. No one else is with me.”

Except for Hamish, he added silently. But how would she know?

After a moment, he called to her again, more insistently this time.

And she said, her voice tremulous, “What do you want? Is there news?”

“Are you alone in there, Mrs. Hamilton?”

There was a pause before she came to the door, opening it a crack. She too looked very tired, her face already losing some of the soft vulnerability he remembered.

Warily she said, “What do you mean? Of course I’m alone.”

“May I come in and look around your room, Mrs. Hamilton? I won’t take more than a moment or two.”

“Look—what is it you’re looking for?”

“I want to see that all is well with you, as Mr. Mallory has assured me it is.”

But with the intuition of a woman, she could sense that something wasn’t right.

“Have you interviewed George Reston?” she demanded suspiciously. “What has he said to you?”

“I’m looking into that, I promise you. Just now—”

Pulling her shawl closer, as if trying to warm herself, she said, “No. I don’t want to see you or anyone else. Go away.”

“Mrs. Hamilton.” He studied her hair, but it appeared dry to him. Yet out in this storm, nothing stayed dry for very long. Had Matthew Hamilton been moved before the rains began? Under cover of the mist?

“I’m not feeling very well this morning. I want to be left alone. Don’t disturb me again until you can bring me good news.” She looked away from him, tears filling her eyes. “I can’t bear much more.”

She closed the door in his face, and he heard the key turn in the lock.

Hamish said, “She didna’ ask how her husband was, this morning.”

There was nothing for it after that but to search the grounds. And the heavy rain hadn’t let up. Rutledge briefly explained to Granville what he was doing and why, then asked to borrow his umbrella.

The doctor said before he handed it over,

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