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"I don't recognize this man."
"Should you?" Dr. Keckilpenny asked.
"Yes." Mr. Bennet looked first at the doctor and then, not seeing realization dawn, at his daughter. "I should."
"Because the body's so fresh, so well dressed," Elizabeth said. "He was given a proper burial, but not in Meryton."
Mr. Bennet nodded. "I think I should hurry Lord Lumpley along with Mrs. Goswick. And I suddenly find there are certain other arrangements I must see to, as well. Lizzy-if you would a.s.sist me?"
He took his leave of the doctor with a nod, then headed for the stairs.
"Good-bye, Dr. Keckilpenny." Elizabeth went up on her tiptoes to peer past him. "Good-bye, Mr. Smith."
Both looked strangely bereft.
"Until we meet again," the doctor said.
"Hrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr," said Mr. Smith.
Elizabeth suspected they were saying more or less the same thing.
CHAPTER 29.
FOR HER YOUNGEST SISTERS, it would've been a dream come true. Sleeping in a plush four-poster bed in a plush bedroom the size of a barn in the plush manor house of a plush n.o.bleman. Yet for Jane Bennet, it was neither dream nor nightmare, for she wasn't sleeping at all. She was lying on her back, staring up at the canopy stretched out above her, thinking.
She thought about the ball she'd be attending the next day-and how humiliating it would be when only Lord Lumpley dared dance with those social lepers, the Bennet girls. She thought about how persistent the baron had been when they'd paid a call on the Goswicks that afternoon-and how it had been his seemingly offhand remark about their daughter Julia's "London friend, Mr. Schwartz" that convinced the couple to put the spring ball in his hands. She thought about her father's rather anxious good-bye to her that evening, and how he'd looked truly distressed only after she'd told him not to worry about her, as Lord Lumpley had been a perfect host so far and, she hoped, might still grow into the role of sober, responsible squire.
But mostly she thought about how much she missed Elizabeth. There could be no dash across the hall for comfort and wisdom here. It would be a long dash indeed to find anyone she knew at all, for Jane had been quartered (for propriety's sake, the baron explained) in a deserted wing of the house far from the other guests. Lt. Tindall and Capt. Cannon (how wonderfully cheerful the man had been when returning from his "reconnoiter" that afternoon!) had been given rooms downstairs on the opposite side of the grand foyer, along with Ensign Pratt and the company surgeon, a crusty old campaigner named Dr. Thorne. The rest of the soldiers were in tents out on the lawn, the only exceptions being Right Limb and Left Limb (who slept in the captain's room, though in what arrangement Jane couldn't guess) and a single guard dozing in a chair outside "Dr. Keckilpenny's sanitarium" (as Papa had cryptically called it).
So she was alone-as alone as she'd ever been, except when out walking or riding by herself. Certainly, she'd never felt more alone. And it wasn't a feeling she liked.
Of what importance were her feelings, though? So she'd been ruined socially. So no matter what the baron might do, she'd never make a match with a gentleman of the sort she admired most-a true gentle man, as warm and soft and pliant as a puppy's fuzzy belly. So it would only be cold, hard warriors like Master Hawksworth who'd look twice at a woman who wore the sword, except to gape or sneer. So... what of it? It would be pure, selfish vanity to think of all that when the unmentionables might be on the rise again.
But, oh, how she longed for love! How she longed for kisses! How she longed for... the rest of it. Whatever that looked like.
Yet none of this was to be hers. She would be forever denied, forever alone.
There was a soft knock on the door.
For a moment, Jane was torn between her nunchucks and her dirk. The dirk won.
"Yes?" Jane said, lifting the dagger by the tip of the blade.
A woman answered.
"Are you awake, Miss?"
Jane could guess how Elizabeth might reply to that: "Not unless I'm talking in my sleep." (Jane wasn't without wit herself. It just rarely seemed charitable to wield it, and charity for Jane always came first.) "Yes, I am," she said.
Her bedroom was blessed with its own hearth, and by the orange glow of the dying embers within, she saw the k.n.o.b on the door begin to turn.
"I brought you something, Miss."
As the door swung slowly open, a new light spread into the room-the dull yellow gleam of a candle. It sat upon a tray being carried by a roly-poly young chambermaid.
On one side of the candle was a decanter of amber liquid. On the other was a single crystal goblet.
Jane slipped the dagger back under her pillow before the girl spotted it. She didn't want it spreading through the household staff that she was the sort of person who'd pull a knife on a servant.
"Thank you. That is so kind," she said. "What is it?"
The maid toddled over to a table and set down her tray. "Our Mr. Belgrave-he's His Lords.h.i.+p's steward, you know-he was worried you might have trouble sleeping, this being your first night in a strange place. So he sent up a splash of medicinal brandy. The baron swears by it. Always does the trick when he's having trouble abed."
The girl made an abrupt hiccup of amus.e.m.e.nt not unlike Lydia and Kitty's chirpy "La!"
"Shall I bring you a gla.s.s?" she asked, already reaching for the brandy.
"Well, I don't usually-"
"Oh, but tonight's different, isn't it? Hardly usual." The maid half filled the goblet, then turned and started toward Jane with it. "Go on. Do yourself a kindness." She didn't stop coming until she was pushed up against the side of the bed with the gla.s.s practically thrust under Jane's nose. "Just a little nip, and before long you'll be having such sweet, sweet dreams."
"But I-"
"Oh, go onnnnnnnnnnn."
Jane took the goblet and sipped.
The maid smiled.
"Good, good. Now how about a nice big gulp to bring the Sandman calling?"
"Mmmmmmm," Jane said.
She tried to hand the goblet back to the chambermaid, but the girl backed away, still grinning.
"Oh, you keep that for now. Drink your fill, and there's plenty more over there if you want it."
"Mmm mmm," Jane said, nodding.
"Good night, then, Miss. And if there's anything you need, just ring. Someone will get it up for you quick."
"Mmm mmm!"
Jane waved as the maid slipped out the door. Then she leaned forward and spat the brandy back in the gla.s.s.
Not only did she not care for spirits in general, the one brandy she'd ever tried had struck her as particularly repulsive. To her surprise, the baron's was even worse. He was well off enough to afford only the best, yet there was a gritty quality to the drink the girl had brought, and a faint aftertaste of licorice.
Jane got out of bed and walked the goblet across the room.
Now, where was I? she thought as she settled the gla.s.s on the tray beside the decanter. Oh, yes. Alone. Forever.
Something thumped directly above her head, and she whipped into the sumo stance so quickly she knocked the carafe of brandy into the fireplace. The gla.s.s shattered, there was a burst of here-and-gone flame, and a billow of black, spice-scented smoke plumed into the room.
Jane didn't even notice. She was staring at the ceiling.
There was another thump, then a pause, then-so m.u.f.fled they were little more than a drone, at first-words. Jane had to strain to make them out.
"Down, Mr. Smith! Smithy, down!" a man seemed to be saying. "Bad zombie! Bad, bad zombie!"
Jane a.s.sumed she wasn't hearing correctly.
There was one more thump, then silence. Jane stood there, staring up, still in her stance, for a long, long time.
She heard nothing more from above, though eventually she did detect the creak of a floorboard just outside her door. She waited for the chambermaid to come barging back in with a gla.s.s of milk or a bed warmer or some other unwanted succor she'd insist on foisting on her. Yet no one entered, no one knocked.
The floorboard creaked again.
Jane picked up the nearest weapon-a mace she'd left propped up against the table-and slipped silently across the room. With a sudden jerk and a half-hearted battle cry, she yanked the door open and brought the mace up high.
Lt. Tindall threw up an arm to block her blow. "It's just me! It's just me!"
He was standing outside the door in full uniform.
"I do beg your pardon!" Jane lowered both her mace and her gaze, and she felt her cheeks flus.h.i.+ng with a blush she prayed it was too dark for the handsome young officer to see. "I heard a noise and... oh, Lieutenant, I'm so sorry!"
"There is no need for you to apologize, Miss Bennet. The fault is entirely mine. If I hadn't been dawdling out here in the hall like a fool..."
Jane peeped up quizzically.
"I couldn't bring myself to knock, you see," the lieutenant explained. "I knew it was most improper, coming to a young lady's room like this. Yet still, I felt compelled to a.s.sure myself of your safety." He looked down at Jane's mace, and his expression soured. "I suppose I need not have bothered."
"Yet you did," Jane said. "And your consideration touches me deeply. I know that you put great stock in what is proper, so for you to come here, at night, on my account... I... I find it quite admirable, actually. It was a fine thing to do. The gesture of a true gentleman!"
This last e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n used up Jane's meager store of forwardness, and she could say no more. Lt. Tindall seemed truly pleased to see her so overcome, however. The pinched look to his face faded away, and his eyes seemed to gleam brighter than the dim light could account for.
"That anyone would wish to extinguish such delicacy...," he began. Then he, too, couldn't go on, and he took his leave with a muttered "Good night" and a bow so deep it brought his head almost even with Jane's knees.
Jane returned to her bed and lay down, though she knew she may as well be doing dand-baithaks for the Master. Sleep would be coming no time soon. Now she had the lieutenant to think of, too.
That morning, he'd made his disapproval of her plain, and the rebuke hurt her deeply. What salve it was-and what a puzzlement-to find that he harbored such concern for her. And such tenderness. He seemed so stern, so stiff, yet perhaps this was but the s.h.i.+eld he wielded to protect a vulnerable, more sensitive self. With a little careful coaxing, maybe that gentler spirit could be drawn out from- There was a soft, shus.h.i.+ng sort of sound and what might have been the squeak of a hinge, and one of the shadows in the darkest part of the room began moving toward the bed. By the time Jane realized it was Lord Lumpley, she already had her dagger at his throat.
"Ah, you are awake, I see," the baron croaked. "So very, very awake."
"My Lord! I'm sorry! I didn't know it was you!"
Jane scurried back to the bed, tossed her dirk on the pillow, and s.n.a.t.c.hed up a dressing gown to cover the white chemise in which she slept.
As she pulled her nightgown on, Lord Lumpley averted his eyes. (A little. Until he thought Jane wasn't looking.) "Perhaps I did doze off," Jane said. "I didn't even notice you come in."
"Oh, that shouldn't surprise you. Netherfield has been in my family for years. I know where all the squeaky floorboards and rusty hinges are!"
"Still..." Jane peered into the gloom across the room. "What were you doing over there, if I may ask?"
"Of course, you may-and I pray you'll forgive me the unpardonable liberty I was taking. It's just that I misplaced my favorite..."
The baron must have been awfully tired himself, Jane thought, for he had to think a moment before dredging up the word he sought.
"... Bible," he finally said. "I keep some of my most cherished volumes in this room, so-seeing as you were surely asleep-I thought I'd just pop in and look for it. Abominably overfamiliar, I know, but we barons are generally allowed our little eccentricities."
When he wasn't eyeing Jane, Lord Lumpley had been eyeing the room, as if searching for something-the Bible, Jane a.s.sumed. His gaze finally settled on the goblet the maid had left. It had tipped over when Jane knocked the carafe into the fire, and the pool of brandy around it sparkled dully in the firelight.
"I see that someone brought you my favorite sleeping draft," the baron said. "Pity it spilled."
"Oh! Yes! I'm sorry. I forgot all about it. And I'm afraid I broke the decanter, too. So careless of me."
Lord Lumpley waved away Jane's apologies with a strained smile. "Think nothing of it. I'll have someone sent along to tidy up... and to bring you another gla.s.s of brandy, of course."
"That's really not necessary, My Lord."
"But I insist." The baron bowed. "Au revoir, Miss Bennet."
"Good night, My Lord."
When the door was closed again, Jane shrugged off her dressing gown and climbed back into bed, certain now that she'd never fall asleep. Not only was a maid on her way, there was even more to think about now.
The baron. Lizzy and Father seemed to consider the man barely one step up from a dreadful-and perhaps even less preferable, as hosts go. Yet he'd been nothing but polite and attentive all day. Yes, it was beyond brazen, his creeping into a young lady's bedchamber. But how different was that, really, from what Lt. Tindall had done? And hadn't it been motivated by the most admirable of interests?
Though, come to think of it, Lord Lumpley had left without any Bible, nor had he mentioned where he was off to search for it next. Strange how thoroughly he seemed to forget about it once he'd offered his excuse for being in the room.
It wasn't often Jane acknowledged the possibility of duplicity. It was so much simpler, so much nicer, to take everyone at his or her word without complicating matters with guile or suspicion. Yet could it be, she wondered, that the baron had indeed been doing just what the lieutenant had-a.s.suring himself of her well-being-because he was... oh, it was embarra.s.sing simply to think it!
Was he really in love with her?
Even sitting alone in bed, Jane looked down and blushed.
A thump on the door roused her from her reverie. The chambermaid was already back with a new decanter of brandy, it seemed, and Jane, feeling guilty about the mess she'd made for the girl, hopped out of bed to let her in.
The girl Jane found standing outside wasn't the servant she'd expected, though. She wasn't a servant at all, in fact.
Nor was she alive.
It was a dreadful, long dead but fresh from the grave to judge by the black earth still caked to its dress and withered flesh and patchy blonde hair. In spots-the tips of the fingers, on and around the teeth no longer covered by lips or gums-the dirt had been smeared away with something new: a paste of jellied brain.