The Cater Street Hangman - Anne Perry [79]
“I don’t know, perhaps just to talk. Why?”
She lifted a shoulder slightly in a small shrug.
“He went on about forgers, and resurrectionists.”
She looked round. “Resurrectionists? What are they—religious charlatans?”
“No. Men who steal corpses to sell to medical students.”
“Oh. How pathetic.”
“Pathetic? It’s disgusting!”
“It’s also pathetic, that people should be reduced to such a level.”
“Are you sure they haven’t reduced themselves?”
“If they have, that’s even worse.”
What an odd woman she was. Sarah would never have viewed it that way. There was an innocence in Charlotte, a gentleness that was quite misplaced, and yet he was drawn to her because of it. Odd. He had always thought it was Sarah who was gentle, and Charlotte who had a streak of . . . of resistance in her, something unfeminine. He looked at her now as she stood with the paintbrush in her hand. She was not as pretty as Sarah, and she lacked the small touches—the fine lace, the little earrings, the delicate curls in the nape of the neck—and yet in a way she was also more beautiful. And in thirty years, when Sarah would be plump, her chin line gone, her hair faded, the bones in Charlotte’s face would still be beautiful.
“It’s a terrible responsibility,” she said slowly. “We all expect him to be able to solve the murders for us, put us back to where we were before.”
And she would still be saying whatever came into her mind, he thought wryly. She would never learn the small deceits that make women mysterious, feminine—that they survive by.
But Charlotte would not sulk over some imagined slight; Charlotte would have a blazing row. In the long run that might be better, easier to put up with.
“At least he doesn’t have to live here. Nobody suspects him,” he said, going back to her remark.
“No, but we’ll all blame him if he doesn’t find the man.”
He had not even thought of that. Now that she pointed it out to him, he felt a surge of sympathy for Pitt. He wished he had not been so patronizing in the coffeehouse.
Charlotte was staring at her picture on the easel. “I wonder if he even knows who he is, or if he’s just as afraid as we are?”
“Of course not! If he knew he’d arrest him!”
“Not Pitt! The man, whoever he is. Does he remember, does he know? Or is he as frightened and as puzzled as the rest of us?”
“Oh God! What an unspeakable thought! Whatever put that into your head?”
“I don’t know. But it’s possible, isn’t it!”
“I shouldn’t think so; I would very much rather not think so. If that were true, it could be—it could be anyone!”
She looked at him solemnly, her eyes very steady and gray. “It could be anyone now.”
“Charlotte, stop it. For heaven’s sake let’s just pray Pitt finds him. Stop thinking about it. There’s nothing we can do except never go out alone, under any circumstances.” He shivered. “Only go out if you have to, and then take Maddock, or your father, or I’ll come with you.”
She smiled—a strange, tight little gesture—and turned back to the painting. “Thank you, Dominic.”
He looked at her. Odd, he had always thought her open, obvious; now she seemed enigmatic, more mysterious than Sarah.
Did one ever learn to understand women?
A couple of days later Dominic had yet more cause to ponder the female mind. They were all sitting in the withdrawing room after dinner; even Emily was at home. Grandmama was crocheting, squinting a little when she occasionally glanced at her work; most of the time she worked blind, her fingers and long habit guiding her.
“I called on the vicar this afternoon,” Grandmama said a little sharply. There was a hint of criticism in her voice. “Sarah took me.”
“Oh?” Caroline looked up. “Did you find them well?”
“Not especially. The vicar was well enough, I suppose, but Martha looked very strained, I thought. A woman should never let herself go like that. She begins to have the look of a drudge.”
“She does work very hard,” Sarah said in her defence.
“That has nothing to do with it, my dear,” Grandmama said disapprovingly. “However hard one works, one should still take care of one’s appearance. It