It is dangerous when
you overhear a random snatch of conversation on a train. Even after it has
passed out of use you continue to wonder what it might have meant. On
overhearing the statement “he used to be a spy” I could not help the imagining
of a little scene of my own.
“He used to
be a spy.” The statement sunk in the silence like the proverbial stone. “He led
a band of mercenaries.” There was little obvious discomfort in her sister’s
composure, though Eleanor liked to imagine that the needle was stabbed into the
tapestry with an overabundance of necessary force. “He murdered his second
wife.” She tried again, injecting more blood-thirsty relish into her words.
Finally she was rewarded with a satisfying response.
“Blast,”
came the reply as her sister retrieved her hand from below the material and
sucked the welling blood from an injured fingertip. “Accursed needle.” She
muttered with a frown of annoyance for the offending instrument.
“Oh
come on Anne. Are you not in the least bit curious?” She asked of her sister, practically
aquiver with curiosity herself. “You might be living next door to a murderer.
How dreadfully exciting. Nothing exciting ever
happens to me.” She ended with an exaggerated sigh that made it halfway to a
pout.
Anne eyed her younger sister, who
was slouched carelessly with legs hooked over the arm of the chair and a foot absentmindedly
kicking the air. She hid her smile of affectionate amusement and murmured
quietly.
“Two wives, my, how terribly
careless of him.” Eleanor rolled her eyes expressing a youthful contempt for
her sister’s facetiousness.
“I knew you were listening! And I
do not know why you pretend to be so fastidious about village gossip. They talk
about our lives often enough.” Anne pressed a gentle hand to the tapestry she
had been embroidering, as if in smoothing out the creases of the material on
her lap she could rid the lines of worry from her own brow.
“I simply think we should avoid prematurely judging
others.” She said in a carefully measured voice. “Remember poor Mistress
Hawthorne? A few carless moments of gossip and everyone believed her to be a
witch, when nothing could have been further from the truth.” Eleanor had the
decency to look shame-faced for at least half a minute before whispering with a
wicked light in her eye,
“He’s bound to be handsome though
with a reputation like that.”
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