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The Housekeepers(41)

Author:Alex Hay

“It was Mr. Murphy’s boys, first thing this morning, before the stalls were even out. They sent a rock through the front window.”

Mrs. Bone shut her eyes. “That’s just larks.”

Archie frowned. “Larks? Mrs. Bone, that was a starting shot, clear as day.”

“Where’s the ledger?”

He patted his overcoat. “Got it. But we had to leave the rest.”

“Leave?”

“We’d already boarded up the back windows. We knew something was coming—you could smell something fishy all week. We put locks on the back office, but they’ll get through those, no trouble. Same with the rooms upstairs.”

My hidey-hole, thought Mrs. Bone, heart tightening. She grabbed Archie with both hands, shook him. “You ought to be up there seeing them off, not down here talking to me.”

He wrestled himself free. “You ought to be up there seeing them off yourself,” he said hotly. “They wouldn’t have come if you’d been at home. But everyone knows Mrs. Bone’s absent without leave.”

“Get down to the bloody factory, lock the gates, get a dozen men on patrol.”

“A dozen men? All our bloody men are down here, Mrs. Bone.” He took a breath. “And they won’t stay put if they know we’re in trouble.”

Mrs. Bone squared up to him. “Then you’d better hold your tongue, hadn’t you?”

Archie let out a rattling sigh. “Men need their wages, Mrs. Bone.”

“We’ll pay ’em this week. We’ll pay ’em tomorrow.”

“We’ve got debts up to our eyeballs. We can’t be paying anyone anything, not till this harebrained job’s settled.” He fixed her with a grim expression. “If it’s settled. We might need to go to Mr. Murphy, call a truce, seek a loan. What’s your fee on this job?”

She straightened. “Two-sevenths,” she said, stoutly. “And I’m not asking Mr. Murphy for tuppence.”

Archie was doing the calculations in his head. “Net or gross receipts?”

She paused.

“Mrs. Bone?”

“Net.”

Archie shook his head. “That’s not enough.” He gave her a careful look. “You signed a contract?”

She wanted to box his ears. “I always sign a contract,” she said, voice stiff.

“There’s ways out of that.”

She summoned her brother then. She did what Danny would have done. She rose up on the balls of her feet, pressed a fingernail to Archie’s face. Scratched the surface of his skin, ever so gently. Traced his eye socket. Said, voice low, “Don’t be telling me how to run my affairs, Archibald. And next time Mr. Murphy comes around, get out the guns.”

She exerted a tiny bit of pressure, imagining his nerves and muscles tingling underneath.

“Mrs. Bone. If we don’t have the cash, and our men get spooked…”

“Not a word more, Archie. To anyone. You got that?”

He nodded, silent.

“Then off you go.”

She hurried back into the house, thoughts swirling, not liking this one bit. Two portions of the net receipts suddenly didn’t seem like much money at all.

A crowd began to form outside the house. By tea-time, there was a crush on both sides of the street. Shepherd put men on the pavement to guard the front porch.

Miss de Vries did her rounds. She couldn’t sit still: she had to watch the transformation. It was like watching the house grow a new skin. Huge boards had been set down across the garden, a vast and slippery deck. The supper tables had been placed under the cypress trees, branches strung with lights. They could catch fire, she thought, glancing upward. The whole place could go up in flames.

After mass she changed her clothes. “Alice can do it,” she said when Iris came up to help her with her dress. Alice looked scared, but she nodded, and dressed Miss de Vries gently, barely touching her skin. Miss de Vries put on her deepest mourning, layering herself in serge and black taffeta, her waist strapped with black velveteen. Her veil was thickly embroidered and came all the way down to her waist. She felt the heat rising in her skin as she descended to the garden, white lilies in her hand.

“Dear Papa,” she said so that the gaggle of newspapermen could hear her. “How we miss you.”

She knelt outside the mausoleum, and laid the lilies at his grave. The flashbulbs burned the air, shocking the pigeons into flight. The picture would make the papers. She’d counted on that.

Virtue displayed, she went back upstairs and put on her tea gown.

“Good, Alice,” she said, inspecting her buttons, her clasps. The girl hadn’t missed a single one. “That will be all.”

Alice gave her a long, pale stare—and went away.

The late-afternoon post was due. Miss de Vries was hungry for it, couldn’t bear to wait any longer. Slowly, slowly, hour by hour, cards had begun landing in the front hall. First the Rutlands. Then Lady Tweedmouth. Lady Londonderry’s circle was quick to follow. Mr. Menzies sent his thanks. So did Lady Fitzmaurice and Lord Athlumney. It was happening. Apparently, the Duchess of Montagu had done her best work. They were coming.

From her bedroom she could hear the distant, whispering sound of the girls rubbing the parquet, could smell the wafts of vinegar coming from the glass in the ballroom. She kept the door open. She would have ordered up a cigarette if she didn’t fear fouling her breath.

There was a knock at the door. She heard William’s voice, right on schedule. “Post, Madam.”

“Come,” she said.

He was tense—she knew that. There had been a shift in his mood in recent days. He’d been keeping his distance. She could always sense these things.

He laid the platter on the table.

She could see one of the envelopes bore a dark red crest. Her heart started beating faster.

Papa had always taught her the art of patience. Of suppressing one’s whims, curtailing one’s deepest desires.

I would make a fine ascetic, she thought dryly. I would make a splendid nun.

“William,” she said. “You must tell me. Was there something between you and Mrs. King?”

The air tilted. His expression became guarded.

People said that William was very beautiful. They praised her for it, as if she had something to do with it, as if she’d won him at an auction. Perhaps she had. But his eyes had no effect on her.

“I only ask,” she said, “for the sake of the household. I am accountable for its reputation.”

He stood there, trussed up in cream silk and his afternoon livery, groomed and manicured. He flushed. “Do you mind, Madam, if I keep my counsel on that matter?”

“Yes,” she said lightly, “I do.” She stretched, reaching for the post tray. “You were spotted with Mrs. King in the garden the other day. Not a very sensible thing to do, given your recent indiscretions.”

His voice was tight. “Spotted by whom, Madam?”

She flipped the envelopes over, picked up the smallest one first, the most uninteresting. “That’s not a denial.”

He said nothing.

She glanced up. “By me, if you must know.” She took out the card:

So pleased to accept,

Yours &c,

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