“Her name is Emma Hale.” She continued collectedly. “She
fell out of a tree as a child. She has a scar on her left elbow.” Harker
realised that the stranger had seen the brutality inflicted on the girl and
provided him with another means of identification. He was impressed by her level-headedness
and yet he could still feel her body trembling. Self-consciously he removed his
hands from her shoulders and then turned, crouching at the side of the deceased
girl.
Carefully he examined the limb in question, with first thumb
and then eye. He was surprised by the flicker of feeling when he found the scar
confirming the girl’s identity. He bowed his head before speaking, his words
stark in the morning brightness.
“It is her, your sister.”
“I’m deeply sorry for your loss Mistress Hale.” The sheriff
interjected with an appropriate murmur of sympathy.
“Lacy. Kathryn Lacy.” Her reply was thoughtless, too occupied
by blinking back the tears which threatened to spill down her cheeks than to pay
heed to the words which had already spilt from her lips. The sheriff’s
reaction was instantaneous, choler staining his cheeks red beneath the fine
growth of a beard.
“You’re Mistress Lacy?” Now she realised what had been said
there was pride in her bearing as she enunciated carefully,
“Yes.” The name meant
little to Harker, who looked on in confusion at the two sudden adversaries.
“It’s very brazen of
you. Turning up like this. Or do you intend to confess?”
“I wouldn’t wish to make it that easy for you sheriff. I
confess only that I did not stop to think that you might be here. I heard
rumours about the discovery of a body and, fearing the worst, I came
immediately.”
“And Emma Hale was one of the girls you helped.” Undisguised disapproval coloured the emphasis upon his
final word. Kathryn shifted slightly so that she now addressed the bemused
surgeon.
“I take orphans and strays into my home. Anyone and everyone
is welcome, no matter their past. I try to help them start again. To make a
living.”
“You train children to become thieves and whores.” Anger
flared briefly at the sheriff’s remark.
“No. You and the rest of society teach them that well
enough. You make the choice for them early on. I simply show them how to
survive the system and help them to make the arrangement a beneficial one.”
Grief passed like a shadow, replacing the anger, as she continued. “Emma has...had...been with me for a few years. She’s been missing over a week. I’ve been out
searching for her, but I suppose I knew there was only one reason why she
wouldn’t come back.”
Harker had been watching her closely throughout the
exchange. She was younger than he had first supposed and there was a surprising
delicacy to her features that belied the coarseness of her livelihood. Her face
was mobile and expressive, a face of which any stage-player would be proud. The
lines could be redrawn, features redesigned, as she assumed each new character.
There was a moment of stillness between these changes in which Harker felt
certain he could read weariness in her pale eyes.
“And you expected what exactly? For me to let you leave
after you provided this information?” Again her expression shifted, this time
to amused arrogance.
“Until just now you didn’t even know what I looked like. My
‘crimes’ are merely rumour and suspicion. And if you thought that was evidence,
your friend here,” she flicked a finger towards Harker, “would be locked up
himself.” The sheriff looked as if he was grinding his teeth painfully, and the
surgeon was astonished that the woman knew so much about him when he had never
heard her name spoken before today.
“We should be leaving Harker.” The sheriff said abruptly,
stiffly formal in Kathryn’s presence. “We have to record your examination and
decide on a course of action.” He was already leaving, ducking between the
lopsided houses. As the surgeon moved to follow, Kathryn reached out, slapping
a hand against his chest. It left a cold, hard impression against his heart.
“Please.” She beseeched him, her features rearranging into
feminine helplessness. Annoyance made him push against the constriction but she
tried again. “Please.” Her tone was harder, more sincere. “All I ask is that
you do not let your knowledge of me affect the way in which you investigate
Emma’s death. She was the kindest soul and hardly fit for the role she played.
She deserved better in life and I don’t want to think that she deserved better
in death also.” The sheriff overheard and turned back, his face a mask of
frozen politeness.
“You can rest assured Mistress Lacy that we will do
everything possible to capture this criminal.”
She didn’t flinch from the insult. Instead she drew herself up and Harker could
almost admire the determined tilt of her chin.
“And you can rest assured gentleman that I will do everything possible to see
that this man pays for what he has done.” Harker felt a shiver of danger at the
words which fuelled so many of his own memories. He seized Kathryn by the wrist,
forcing her to look up at him in a submissive pose. Pain whipped through his
voice, causing it to become a sharply barbed threat.
“There is a line. A line between revenge and justice. You
would do well to mark it Mistress Lacy and see that you do not cross it. Or one
day you will have cause for regret.”
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