The Sins of the Wolf

The Sins of the Wolf by Anne Perry Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Sins of the Wolf by Anne Perry Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anne Perry
Tags: Fiction:Mystery:Crime
intrusion, since a glance told that it was reserved for Mrs. Mary Farraline and companion. Hester’s spirits were lifted already. It would be so different from the long, exhausting journey up, during which she had managed only brief and disturbed catnaps. She found herself smiling in anticipation.
    Mary merely glanced around her as she stepped in. Presumably she had been in first-class carriages before, and this one held no interest for her.
    “The luggage is in the guard’s van,” Baird said from the doorway, his eyes on Mary’s face with a directness which did not seem to be there when he spoke to anyone else. “They will unload it for you in London. You may forget about it until then.” He lifted the small overnight case with toiletries and the medicine chest onto the luggage rack for her.
    Alastair glanced at him irritably, then did not bother to say anything, as though it all had been said before, and had been no use then, or now, or perhaps in these circumstances was too trivial to bother with. His attention was on his mother. He looked troubled and short-tempered.
    “I think you have everything you need, Mother. I hope your journey will be uneventful.” He did not look at Hester, but his meaning was obvious. He bent as if to kiss Mary on the cheek, then apparently changed his mind and straightened up again. “Griselda will meet you, of course.”
    “We’ll be here to meet you on your return, Mother,” Eilish said with a quick smile.
    “Hardly, my dear.” Quinlan’s expression indicated his feelings profoundly. “It will be half past eight in the morning. When were you ever up at that hour?”
    “I can be—if someone wakes me,” Eilish said defensively.
    Baird opened his mouth, and closed it again without speaking.
    Oonagh frowned. “Of course you can, if you wish to enough.” She turned back to Mary. “Now, Mother, do you have everything you need? Are there any footwarmers here?” She looked down at the floor, and Hester’s eyes followed hers. Footwarmers. What a blessed thought. On the journey up her feet had been so cold she had almost lost all sensation in them.
    “Send for some,” Quinlan said with raised eyebrows. “There ought to be.”
    “There are,” Oonagh answered him, bending down to pull one of the large stone bottles forward. It was filled with hot water, and also with a chemical which was supposed, when shaken vigorously, to restore some of the heat naturally lost towards morning. “There you are, Mother, it’s lovely and hot. Rest your feet on that. Where’s the traveling rug, Baird?”
    He handed it to her obediently, and she took it and made Mary comfortable, wrapping it around her, and folded the spare one on the other seat. No one was taking much notice of Hester, who was apparently not expected to begin her duties until they had actually departed. She arranged her valise where it was out of the way, then sat down on the seat opposite and waited.
    Gradually all the good-byes were said and each of them moved back into the corridor until only Oonagh was left.
    “Good-bye, Mother,” she said quietly. “I shall look after everything while you are gone—and do it as you would have.”
    “What an odd thing to say, my dear.” Mary smiled in amusement. “You look after most of the household now. And when I come to think of it, I believe you have done for some considerable time. And I assure you, it had never crossed my mind to worry.”
    Oonagh kissed her very lightly, then turned to Hester, her eyes direct and very clear. “Good-bye, Miss Latterly.” And the next moment she was gone.
    Mary settled a trifle more comfortably in her seat. She was naturally facing forward, and it was Hester who would travel always looking the way she had come.
    A wry look crossed Mary’s face, as though her last words in some way amused her.
    “Are you worried?” Hester said quickly, wondering if there were some way she might ease her concern. Mary Farraline was not only her patient,

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