The Witch of Tin Mountain(63)
“No.”
“I can hurt you more than you ever knew you could hurt.”
I bark a hoarse laugh. “Go on. Sic your horde on me. You can try to hurt me. But I already know what it means to hold pain deep inside, Bellflower. My daddy taught me just how much a soul can suffer.”
You should have never been born, you worthless chit. His last, whiskey-soaked words to me, the night before he found his death. The heat sears through me again. I narrow my eyes and focus all my will. My head throbs so strongly, I think it might crack open. There’s a loud crash behind the pulpit. The acrid scent of kerosene fills the air, followed by a sickening flare of yellow-orange light.
“Fire!”
TWENTY-FOUR
DEIRDRE
1881
Death was in Phoebe’s room. It hung heavy in the fetid, stinking air. The breeze from the open window did nothing to quell it. Deirdre blinked and pulled in a tight breath, covering her nose with her hand to block the stench.
Phoebe wasn’t moving. Her skin looked twice as yellow as it had that morning, and her eyes were sunk deep in their sockets and smudged with grayish purple. Esme knelt next to Miss Munro, her ivory skirts pooling around her. “Phoebe, it’s me. Esme. Can you hear me?”
The dying girl let out a rasp of rancid air and turned her head slightly toward Esme. “Why . . .”
As Deirdre watched the two girls, an uncomfortable suspicion needled her. Something about the way Esme spoke to Phoebe seemed much more intimate than she ever knew them to be.
Constance burst into the room, carrying a ewer of water. She shoved Deirdre to the side and the pitcher sloshed, splashing water onto the floor. “What’s she doing in here?”
Miss Munro stood and crossed the room, taking the ewer from Constance. “Never you mind, Miss Brewster. Now go to the rectory and wake Father Sunderworth. Have him bring the Eucharist. It would bring Miss Darrow much comfort to have him here.”
Constance scowled at Deirdre, her nostrils flaring, and turned on her heel. Miss Munro shook her head with a weary sigh. She poured warm water in the basin, dipped a fresh cloth into it, and wrung it out, then handed it to Esme. “Miss Buchanan, if you could relieve me for a few moments, I’d have a word with Miss Werner in the hall.”
Deirdre’s stomach tumbled to her feet. She followed the headmistress out, her feet clumsy. Miss Munro gestured to the settee at the end of the hallway, overlooking the school gardens. Deirdre reluctantly sat, pushing her sweaty palms across her lap, over and over. From downstairs, a cheerful polka floated up. The lively music was an ironic counterpoint to the deathly atmosphere of the room down the hall.
“Someone mentioned you might have had something to do with Miss Darrow’s sickness.” Miss Munro peered at Deirdre over her spectacles. “I’d hope not. But if so, you’ll need to confess it to me now. If she expires and the coroner comes, I won’t be able to protect you from an investigation. But, perhaps, if you might have done something accidentally . . .”
Should she confess what she had done? A cold sweat broke out along the nape of Deirdre’s neck and ran down her back. Just how much could Miss Munro do to help her? Certainly, she had some level of influence with her money and standing, but would it be enough to keep Deirdre from the courtroom or the gallows?
Tell her nothing.
Deirdre jolted at the velvet deep whisper in her left ear. Her head jerked toward the open window. The wind had picked up, whipping the linen curtains to the side and bringing the scent of confederate jasmine with it. She expected to see Gentry, but his shadowy form was not there.
“I . . . I don’t know why Phoebe . . . I mean to say, Miss Darrow, has taken ill, ma’am. I wish I knew.”
Miss Munro cleared her throat. “Miss Caruthers told me the two of you had some sort of quarrel yesterday, in the stairwell. And Miss Brewster mentioned a book in your room. A magic book, of some sort. With spells.”
Deirdre’s forehead pinched at this. “Constance shouldn’t have been snooping in our room. I only have a journal with a few family recipes. Nothing bad or evil.”
“Will you fetch it for me, so that I might have a look and put these rumors to rest?”
“I . . . I can’t.” Deirdre bit her lip.
Miss Munro sighed and rolled her head on her delicate neck. “Miss Werner. If you refuse to cooperate with me, I’ll have your room searched this very moment.”
She’d have to bring it, then. Have to show her. She had marked the page with the mushrooms with a length of satin ribbon. She could remove it, of course, but she couldn’t tear the pages free. Miss Munro would know. Dammit. Instead of dancing, she should have done what she’d planned and hidden the book in the gardens. “I’ll go fetch it, then.”
“Very good. I’ll wait here. Don’t tarry too long.”
Deirdre made her way up to the top floor, her knees trembling. She pushed open the door to her room and startled. Ambrose Gentry stood there, handsomely dressed in evening clothes, facing the window. He turned, his lips quirking up at the corners. Deirdre whispered a curse beneath her breath.
“Ah, there you are. You look stunning in green, Miss Werner.”
He walked toward her, and for the first time, she heard his footfalls on the floorboards. His shadow stretched out long behind him. Deirdre reached out and poked a finger at his lapel and instead of the usual oily mire, felt fine summer wool. He laughed and grasped her hand in his. She jerked away at the feel of his cool flesh. He was truly here. Not just a figment of her imagination or the menacing specter that haunted her from the shadows.