Anne Perry's Silent Nights_ Two Victorian Christmas Mysteries - Anne Perry [82]
Later in the afternoon, Emily made the opportunity to speak to Susannah alone, and tried to find the words to ask her.
“Daniel seems to have made something of a friendship with Brendan Flaherty,” she remarked casually. They were standing in the drawing room looking out of the long window at the storm-battered garden.
“Oh, really?” Susannah said with some surprise.
Emily seized on it. “Mrs. Flaherty was very upset. She disapproved so violently she practically ordered Daniel to leave, and it embarrassed Brendan acutely.”
Susannah looked confused. “Are you sure?”
“Yes. Does that have anything to do with Connor Riordan?”
“How could it?”
“Were they friends too?”
“Are you asking me if Brendan killed him?” Susannah said in surprise. “I have no idea. I can’t think why he would.”
Emily refused to give up. “We don’t know why anyone would, but it is inescapable that somebody did. Why is Mrs. Flaherty so protective of Brendan? You know them. Was his father really so wild, and is Brendan the same? He seems very likable to me, and more gentle than Mrs. Flaherty.”
Susannah smiled. “Seamus Flaherty was a drinker, a brawler, and a womanizer. Mrs. Flaherty is afraid Brendan will be the same. He looks like his father, but I don’t know that it’s much more than that.”
“He isn’t married, though,” Emily pointed out. “Does he have girls in the different villages? Or one after another?”
Susannah was amused. “Not more than most young men, so far as I know. But if he did, that might get him killed, but not Connor Riordan.”
Emily abandoned the pursuit, and went for a walk in the fading sun, watching it die over the sea in the long winter twilight. She heard the crunch of footsteps on the gravel and Daniel came up the shore towards her. The wind had stung some color into his cheeks and his dark hair was tangled. He climbed up the slithering shingle to where she stood, and waited beside her for several moments before speaking. The fading light sharpened his features, making the hollow of his cheeks more pronounced, the lines of his mouth and the lean curve of his throat. He was almost beautiful.
Emily was achieving nothing. She had tried subtlety and observation. Time was closing in. Perhaps in a few days Daniel would go, or even worse, Susannah’s health would fail and Emily would not learn what had happened to Connor Riordan in time. The village remained steeped in its poison.
“Did Brendan Flaherty make a sexual advance towards you?” she said impulsively, and was shocked at her own directness.
Daniel’s mouth dropped open and he stared at her in amazement. Then he started to laugh. It was a joyous sound, bubbling up inside him in total spontaneity.
Emily felt her face burning, but she refused to look away. “Did he?” she insisted.
Daniel controlled himself and the laughter died away. “No, he most certainly didn’t. He’s more patient with his mother than many a man might be, but there’s nothing of that sort about him.”
“I wasn’t thinking of his mother,” Emily said tartly. “She’s terrified he’s going to be a womanizer like his father, and a drunkard. And yet she admired him. She wants Brendan to be just like him, and yet she doesn’t. There’s no way he could succeed for her.”
“Ah! So wrong, and yet so right,” Daniel said appreciatively. “Ask Mrs. O’Bannion. Though I doubt she’ll tell you. Come on, let’s go back to the house. You’ll catch your death standing here. That wind off the sea has knife blades in it.” He offered her his hand to balance as she stepped down over the rough shingle into the sand.
When they got home, Susannah was in the kitchen. She looked pale—drained of all strength.
“What is it?” Emily said quickly, going towards her and putting her arm around her to support her weight.
“I’m all right,” Susannah said impatiently, although it was obviously not true. “I was just putting things out ready for breakfast.”
“Maggie’ll do that in the morning,” Emily told her.
“No,” Susannah said with a little catch in her voice.