Locked rooms - Laurie R. King [81]
Then, when the afternoon sun was going soft with the incoming fog, he met Miss Adderley.
Chapter Thirteen
Miss Hermione Adderley was ninety if she was a day, and might have admitted to ten years more if he'd been her doctor, or priest. She was well guarded by a butler who looked nearly as old, and a house-maid in her late forties who bore a striking resemblance to the butler. All three had spines as straight and unbending as one of the gleaming brass pokers arrayed beside the ten-foot-wide marble fireplace, and Holmes would never have got inside had he been mere trade. But the old lady, whose shoes had the unbent look of those whose owner spent most of her waking hours in one chair or another, was fiercely curious about the world outside her window, and before the fragile old man at the door could turn the visitor away, the maid was behind him, whispering in his ear.
Disapproval and suspicion stiffened every thread of the butler's spotless black suit, but its wearer stood back, bowed Holmes in, and accepted hat, walking-stick, and overcoat, handing them over to the maid. He then picked up the gleaming silver tray from the polished teak table, held it out for Holmes' card, and showed the visitor into the room to the left of the door-way. His gait as he went to take his mistress the card told Holmes that the man was a martyr to rheumatism, but he crossed the freshly waxed marble floor without event and was back in moments, murmuring that Holmes should come with him.
The old lady in the brocade chair was so tiny her head did not clear the chair's oval back, and her creaseless shoes rested on a needlepoint hassock. Her hand in his felt like a bird's foot, so delicate he was afraid to close his fingers lest he leave bruises. But her cornflower blue eyes were undimmed by age, her pure white hair soft but full, and the myriad wrinkles that made up her face seemed to quiver with interest.
“Mr Holmes,” she said in a high, thin voice, “from London. Pray have a seat so I don't get a neck-cramp looking up at you. How do you find London these days?”
He settled onto a chair across the bay window from her, trying to arrange his knees so his legs didn't rise up around his ears. “I left London in January, when a person would find it cold and dreary. I imagine that in April it is most pleasant.”
“And are the fogs as bad as ever they were?”
“So long as the town continues to heat its homes, there will be yellow fogs.”
“I have very fond memories of your ‘pea-soupers,'” the old woman confided. “We spent some months there when I was a young sprig of a thing, and I escaped the eyes of my governess under the blessing of just such a fog. I had a beau,” she explained, one eyelid lowering in a manner that would have been coquettish had it not also been self-mocking.
Holmes laughed aloud, and the old blue eyes danced. Tea was brought then, and as the maid poured and offered the sugar, she surreptitiously watched the visitor. Whatever she saw in him assuaged her suspicion; her spine relaxed and with it her tongue, so that before she left them, she raised an admonitory finger and said to Holmes, “Now you watch that she doesn't get over-tired. And if she tells you she wants you to take her out dancing, she's not allowed out on a Saturday night.”
“I hear, and obey,” Holmes said with a small bow of his head. When the door had closed again, Miss Adderley picked up her child-sized eggshell cup.
“Mimi has lived in this house her whole life. I think she forgets that I'm not actually her grandmother. Her mother worked in the kitchen, and Hymes—the butler—is the child's grandfather. So, Mr Holmes, what brings you to San Francisco and to my door?”
Holmes assembled his words with care, aware that too long a story would tire his hostess cruelly, and too little would not satisfy her.
“I am acting on behalf of a woman whose family was here at the time of the earthquake and fire.”
“This would have been 1906?”
“Yes.”