Read The Haunted Season Online
Authors: G. M. Malliet
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Again, for my mother
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My thanks to
The Epistle Magazine
of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Alexandria, Virginia (Lent/Easter edition), for this inspiration: “Remember that the Lord has spoken often through dreams. Who knows what God is saying to the person who appears to be sleeping.”
My thanks also to Boris Andjelic, Alexander Bogdanov, and Stephen Redburn for allowing me to lean on their expertise. Any mistakes, as always, are my own.
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THE REVEREND DESTINY CHATSWORTH:
curate newly assigned to assist the Reverend Maxen Tudor of St. Edwold's Church in Nether Monkslip.
MAXEN “MAX” TUDOR:
a former MI5 agent turned Anglican priest, Max thought he'd found a measure of peace in the idyllic village of Nether Monkslipâuntil murder began to invade his Garden of Eden.
AWENA OWEN:
the owner of Goddessspell, the village's New Age shop, Awena also has come to own Max Tudor's heart. The arrival of their child completes the couple's joy.
MRS. HOOSER:
vicarage housekeeper and the mother of Tildy Ann and Tom.
MS. EUGENIA SMITH-GANDERFORT:
a church volunteer devoted to Max Tudor. But is she a little
too
devoted?
ELKA GARTH:
owner of the Cavalier Tea Room and Garden.
LORD AND LADY BAYER BAADEN-BOOMETHISTLE OF TOTLEIGH HALL:
currently in residence with the lord's son, Peregrine; his daughter, Rosamund; and the dowager viscountess.
BILL TRAVIS:
estate manager and horse trainer at Totleigh Hall, he is rumored to have caught the eye of the lady of the house.
CHARLES HARGREAVES:
butler/valet at Totleigh Hall.
SUZANNA WINSHIP:
the beautiful, outspoken, and ambitious sister of the local doctor.
CHANEL DIRKSON:
a successful author of self-help books whose own life is barely under control.
DR. BRUCE WINSHIP:
an expert in general ailments, Suzanna's brother revels in theories of how the criminal mind operates.
FRANK CUTHBERT:
local historian, famous author (
Wherefore Nether Monkslip
), and husband of Mme. Lucie.
MISS AGNES PITCHFORD:
a retired schoolmistress and a walking cross-indexed repository of all village gossip.
NOAH CARAWAY:
wealthy owner of Noah's Ark Antiques and of Abbot's Lodge.
DETECTIVE CHIEF INSPECTOR COTTON:
the kinetic DCI is again dispatched from Monkslip-super-Mare to investigate a most suspicious death in the placid village of Nether Monkslip.
DR. SPROTTLE:
an expert in the art of death.
SERGEANT ESSEX:
DCI Cotton's no-nonsense assistant.
CANDICE THOR ST. GABRIEL AND ELSPETH MUIR:
former nannies at Totleigh Hall.
THE RIGHT REVEREND NIGEL ST. STEPHEN:
the bishop wants to know why Max Tudor is again involved in murder most sordid.
LILY IVERSON:
owner of a local knitting and textiles business.
TARA RAINE:
A lithe, attractive yoga instructor, she rents studio space at Goddessspell.
MAJOR BATTON-SMYTHE:
a widower with a passion for history, and for Lily Iverson.
ADAM BIRCH:
owner of the Onlie Begetter bookshop.
MR. STACKPOLE:
the sexton of St. Edwold's Church.
CONSTABLE MUSTEILE:
an officious man with ambitions to solve a crime, any crime.
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Granted that miracles
can
occur, it is, of course, for experience to say whether one has done so on any given occasion.
âC. S. Lewis,
Miracles
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These are the days of miracle and wonder â¦
âPaul Simon and Forere Mothoeloa, “The Boy in the Bubble”
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It was springtime, with lingering cold and damp shrouding the somber London streets. The best time of year to be in a steam room.
And as the Reverend Destiny Chatsworth was to discover, a steam room was the ideal place to be for a spot of casual eavesdropping.
Not that
she
would ever eavesdrop. God forbid. That fell somewhere into the same category as gossiping. But if being wrapped up in steam somehow gave people the illusion they were alone and unwitnessed while having a private conversation, she didn't see how it was her fault if she overheard a few things.
Some of them rather shocking.
Destiny being a newly minted priest in the Anglican Communion, the fees for the use of the spa facilities in the exclusive Ladies' University Club, a women-only establishment in St. James's in central London, would normally be out of the reach of a not-yet-employed curate. But her doting and very wealthy aunt was a member, and as a combination graduation/ordination present she had given Destiny a guest-pass stay at the LUC. Destiny's progressive aunt was tremendously supportive of her niece's new calling: Aunt Jane still considered it an outrage that women had had to wait until 1994 to be ordained as priests in the Anglican Church.
With a few weeks open between her ordination and her first day as curate of St. Edwold's in Nether Monkslip, Destiny was using the time to relax, to catch up on her reading, to shop, to get a decent haircut for once, and to reflect on the glorious new future that awaited her. The question of what to wear was a vexing one: Wearing the religious collar was, for women, a bit trickier than for the men, unless one happened to like gray flannel suits and black shirts, which Destiny did not.
And so she approached her stay at the late-nineteenth-century club as a special treat, and with a sense of saying good-bye to luxuryânot just to such stately accommodations and fine food but also to having time free to pamper and indulge herself. Leaving university always meant putting away childish things, but perhaps this was even truer in her case. Destiny was nothing if not earnest in her desire to shine a pure light on an ever-darkening world. And to look appropriately dressed while doing it.
The LUC (its members called themselves the LUCkey ones), which dated to 1885, was modeled on every men's club in London: all leather armchairs, crackling fireplaces in winter, and rustling newspapers. There may have been a bit more floral print in the reading room upholstery and window tiebacks, and crocheted doilies protecting the tabletops, but those were the main differences. In recent years, a modern spa had been installed at great expense, and thus not without rancor and lingering ill feeling among the members of the club's General Committee, many of whom felt that the availability of chess and backgammon boards, having provided sufficient licit diversion for decades, should continue to suffice. Discussions over the spa had reached the same fever pitch as discussions over the movement to modernize the name of the LUC, with Miss Haverdam threatening to chain herself to the fence if this scandalous proposal succeeded.
While men were now permitted to stay as guests in the en suite second-floor rooms, few took advantage of this offer, deterred no doubt by the undeniably, not to say stridently, feminine air of the place. Men, in any event, were strictly forbidden the use of the spa amenities, a concession needed to get the plans for the new spa past the eagle eye of the General Committee.
The new spa was in essence a glamification of what had once consisted of little more than a large wading pool, a sluggish Jacuzzi (“in reality, a large petri dish for mold,” as more than one member had described it), and rows of rickety metal lockers. The result, something like a cross between a small school gymnasium and a recently excavated Roman bath, still was more functional than luxurious. But to Destiny Chatsworth, it was like the antechamber to heaven itself. Undressing before an empty locker in the spa's dressing room, she reflected with no little wonder at the good luck that had befallen her. To soon be working for Max Tudor! The Reverend
Max Tudor
! She had known Max from when they were students at St. Barnabas House, Oxford, where heâclose to completing his degree as she was just beginning her studiesâwas already legendary, viewed as a rising star in the Anglican firmament. That he had chosen to become vicar of a small village like Nether Monkslip, when he could have had his pick of parishes, surprised no one who knew him. So to be specially invited to apply for the position as his curate ⦠well. It was a feather in her cap, a sign of how hard she'd worked and how far she'd come, and she had to stifle the very human impulse to brag openly. Although she did take every opportunity to insinuate the topic gently into every conversation, she hoped she'd be forgiven for it.
As she disrobed the body she thought of as attractively, even Rubenesquely, plump, she could not help but notice the lithe young woman to her right, who was applying extravagant amounts of perfumed body lotion. Destiny pegged her as a yoga practitioner, and possibly a habitué of the beaches on the Continent. She had skin tanned to a uniform shade of milky tea, which suggested either a stay at a nude resort or frequent recourse to a solarium. Even the aureoles of her nipples blended into the surrounding skin, giving her the plasticized appearance of a Selfridges store dummy awaiting its next costume change.
This superb physical specimen, having draped itself in designer clothing and heels, left behind an old copy of
Bild
magazine on one of the locker room benches. Destiny, who seldom had time for light reading, began leafing idly through the pages, reflecting as she did so that Duchess Kate was starting to show the same uncanny knack for attracting bad press into her life as had Duchess Fergieâfor wearing not
quite
enough clothing just as a camera lens was pointed straight at her backside. Despite the perks of the job, Destiny wouldn't trade places with her. Not for longer than an hour. Just long enough to see the parts of Buckingham Palace that were closed to visitors. (Destiny was, among other things, a history buff.)