Read Of Moths and Butterflies Online
Authors: V. R. Christensen
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Literary, #Romance, #General
Charlie sat up and examined her for a moment. “I think Miss Claire will like you,” he said. “I believe she’ll like you very much.”
“I’m a little frightened of this Miss Claire, to own the truth.”
“She
is
a little frightening,” Charlie conceded with a laugh. “But in the best of ways.”
Which did little to offer Imogen anything in the way of reassurance.
N THE LONDON
townhouse he shared with his aunt, Roger Barrett sat, driven to idleness by the absence of his dearest friend and by the elusiveness of any diversion, worthy or otherwise. Julia too was taciturn this evening. It was not like her, but so far Roger had failed to notice.
“Is it some illicit pact Parliament has made with the devil that ensures that the weather for an entire six months is nothing but fog and rain? I’ve not seen the sun in weeks.”
Julia, with her chin resting on her loosely fisted hand, her gaze vainly piercing the fog-filled streets outside, did not answer.
“It’s abominably cold in here.”
Still no answer. Nothing.
“Great day, it must be colder inside than out!”
At last, and without looking. “Hmm? Did you say something?”
“Has the fire gone out?” He stood then, to see for himself. “No? Well it could be stoked higher, I dare say.” And he crossed to the sideboard to pour himself a drink.
“Ring for Mary, then.”
Before Roger could quite reach the bell pull, the door opened and Mary entered, stacked the coals higher and left again with a polite curtsey, as Roger watched her with suspicious interest.
“How do you like that?” he said when the door was closed again.
“What Muriel ever had to complain of, I can’t imagine,” Julia answered as she turned back to the window. “I think that girl must have been the most faithful of any of my brother’s servants.”
“Muriel has hardly a kind word for anyone,” Roger returned. “Do you believe her? Mary, I mean. Do you believe she truly has no idea where Imogen has gone?”
“There’s no telling, really. She is faithful; I have no doubt of that. But I cannot believe she would consider Imogen’s running away to have been in her best interest.”
“Five weeks and not a word! Not a clue!”
Julia looked to her nephew. “Not quite without a clue.”
Roger, in three strides, was beside his aunt. “What do you mean? What are you saying?”
Julia examined him a moment. “Do you know Mrs. Emily Barton?”
“Should I?”
“No,” she answered pointedly. “You shouldn’t. But she has lately been present at a few of the dinner parties to which Muriel and Lara have been fortunate enough to be invited. I’m not quite sure what her credentials are. She seems to me a rather common character. But you know Society these days. It is not as stationary and predictable as it once was.”
“For which I, for one, am grateful.”
Julia laughed. “Yes. And I suppose I should be too. Were it not for your uncle, my dear husband—may God rest his soul—” and she placed her hand tenderly over her heart, as she always did at the mention of him, “I would probably have to work every bit as hard as my sisters do, and simply to maintain myself amidst the lowest of the respectable circles. But for him... Well, we neither of us have to struggle now, do we?”
“But what news of Imogen? What has this Mrs. Barton to do with her?”
“She has been asking questions.”
“Of you?”
“Of Muriel, mainly. Strange questions, too. Regarding our brother’s servants.”
“Mary?”
“That was not the name she mentioned. Shaw, I believe it was. Gina Shaw. You were not aware of anyone by that name?”
Roger shook his head thoughtfully. “Mr. Everard had so many though, coming and going. No one ever stayed long. But what interest to anyone should your brother’s servants be?”
“It seems someone from his house has shown up at the home of an acquaintance of hers, begging for a position. And it was shortly after my brother’s death. Within a day or two.”
Roger could not think what to make of this, but for the fact that something hard and cold had settled in the hollow of his stomach.
“Have you asked Mary?”
“No. No, not yet.”
Roger crossed the room once more in search of the bell pull. And pulled it hard. Mary appeared half a moment later.
“Mary,” Roger began, and rather impatiently.
“Roger, let me.”
With a breath of air, he agreed, and folded his arms across his chest.
“Mary,” Julia gently inquired, “did my brother, Mr. Everard...did he ever have any servants by the name of Shaw? Can you remember anyone by that name?”
“No, ma’am,” she answered. “I can recall no one by that name.”
“No one answering to Gina?”
Mary started visibly, then recovered her composure. But it was too late.
Roger stepped forward. “Tell us, Mary, what you know of a Gina Shaw.”
“Nothing,” she said, vehemently. “Nothing at all of anyone by that name.”
Roger, frustrated, turned from her and began pacing the room. Remembering his drink, he tossed it off as Julia continued to question the young maid.
“Do you know where cook and the housekeeper have gone?” Julia asked.
Mary shook her head. “There’s been no housekeeper for such a long time. And I don’t know where cook went to. The moment Mr. Everard popped off… Forgive me,” she said and flushed.
“No, no. Go on, Mary.”
“The moment she heard he was no more...well, she left. Not a day’s notice. She just left. What was Miss Imogen to do then without someone to cook her meals?”
“I think Muriel had accounted for that,” Roger said.
“Yes,” Mary said, turning to him. “But Miss Imogen did not want to go to that woman, now did she?”
“No,” Julia said. “No, she did not.”
“She might have gone to you, though.”
Both Roger and Julia were caught off guard by the girl’s uncharacteristic boldness.
“If you’d insisted, she might have done. I won’t say she would’ve done, but she might have. And now she’s gone.” Mary, covering her face in her apron, began to cry, relieving them both of any remaining suspicion.
And yet... “You said you knew no one by the name of Gina Shaw,” Roger asked her. “You swear to this?”
“Yes,” she said, and nodded. “Yes, I swear I never knew anyone by such a name as that.”
“Nor by Shaw alone?”
“No. Nor by that name neither.”
“And what of Gina?”
Mary paled.
“You
have
known someone by that name?”
She didn’t answer.
“Mary! I demand that you tell me whether you have ever known anyone by the name of Gina.”
She hesitated, but she became suddenly forthcoming as Roger took another step toward her. “I never knew anyone whose right and proper name was Gina. But I did know as Miss Imogen was sometimes called that.”
Roger’s eyes grew large and he felt the vein in his temple begin to pulse.
“Those gentleman, them who came to see Mr. Everard… One or two of them...one in particular...he liked to call her by that name, though she hated it so.”
“Who! Who would dare call her by something so common? I want to know, Mary. Tell me!”
But Mary would say nothing more about it.
“It doesn’t matter, Roger.”
Roger turned to his aunt, her face kind, comforting in her shared grief.
“That is not what’s important now.”
“No,” Roger said, only vaguely comprehending. Was it possible that his cousin and dearest friend was now found? By someone, somewhere? “This Mrs. Barton, do you think—”
“I’ll do what I can, Roger. But it may be too late.”
“Too late?”
“If the woman is in Muriel’s confidence...”
“Yes, but at least then she’s found. That’s something. And you can step in then. If Imogen doesn’t wish to live under Muriel’s care, then bring her here. It’s a simple matter, really.”
“It’s not, though. To bring her here, Roger. It complicates things, don’t you see?”
“No. No, I don’t see at all.”
“Muriel is her godmother. She has the right to claim her. And truly, it’s not possible for me to take you both on. Nor would it be prudent.”
“I’ll go then. I’ll get a place of my own.”
“Absolutely not.”
“It’s not possible you object to my wish to marry her.”
“No. Of course not. I see quite plainly all she might do for you. Of all the people whose influence might improve you, there is no one on this earth who can make of you what Imogen might.”
Roger did not answer this, only poured himself another drink. He was prepared to commit to anything, if she could only be brought home.
“However,” Julia continued with a great steadying breath, “Muriel will cause trouble for us all if we attempt to interfere. Should Imogen show up on my doorstep, of course I would exert all my powers to protect her. But I think that eventuality is not very likely. Imogen has not much faith in me, and that is my own fault. I will remedy that if I can,” she added with a heavy sigh, “whenever I may. But truly, Roger, I can’t help feeling that poor Imogen would have a better chance were Muriel to take the will to chancery.”
“She has not?”
“No. And while there’s a possibility of her return, and of Muriel gaining control over her, she’ll not risk it. But the battle will be far harder waged across the dining room table rather than in a courtroom.”
He knew she was right, but at the moment, it was all secondary. “Just bring her home,” he said. “We can figure the rest out later. Just, dear God in heaven, bring her home.”
* * *
Newly arrived, Claire stood in the Abbey’s great entrance hall and sighed. Archer watched her as she examined the place.
“It never changes, you know?”
“No, I suppose it wouldn’t.”
She, glanced at him, unpinned her hat and removed it. He’d not seen her in some time, and she looked taller, her hair fairer.
“One might expect something,” she said with another cursory glance about the room. “A little extra dust year after year, the tapestries more worn, more faded. But no. It is always the very same.”
“Not everything is the same.”
“No?”
“We’ve begun some improvements.”
Claire’s eyes widened.
“You are to cast your approval. Sir Edmund says so.”
“My approval?” she asked, dubiously.
“Or your disapproval, as the case may be.”
“Now I
am
intrigued,” she said as she pulled off her gloves. “Which rooms?”
“The west bedroom suite.”
Claire’s eyes grew larger still. “You had better show me.”
And Archer led the way.
“You are finished, then?” she asked him as they made their way together, her arm in his. “With your studies, I mean.”
“Another month or so is all.”
“And what then?”
“I don’t know, Claire,” was his characteristically dismissive answer.