Beatrice: An Alarming Tale of British Murder and Woe Tedd Hawks (adult books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Tedd Hawks
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The candles continuedto hiss. An elongated moan came from the draft flowing through the room.
June was the first tospeak. âDaddyâŠâ she asked warily, âare you here with us?â
Martha tensed. Her wildeyes scanned the room. Robert was intently focused on Corinthiana, his knottedhands stroking his wild beard. From outside the room a clock chimed.
âBixby Hawsfeffer isnot here,â Kordelia said slowly. âWho else would like to address the undead?â
âLucinda?â Martha askedsoftly. âLucindaâŠdo you wish to speak?â
At that moment, a greatthud was heard in the room. Corinthiana and June both shrieked. Robert fellback from the table. Even Kordelia lost her composure, her turban slipping fromher brow. Only Beatrice was unperturbed, her dead fish eyes revealing noemotion.
âSheee is heeere!âCorinthiana gasped. âLucindaaa! Speeeak tooo us!â
âMissus,â Martha saidsoftly.
âSilence!â Corinthianawhispered. âLucindaaa speeeaks!â
Martha crossed herarms, her face filled with abject loathing. Crockett, heart racing, handsbraced on the table, followed Marthaâs vindictive gaze and saw that she waslooking to the window, which was covered in blood.
âMrs. Hawsfeffer,â hesaid softly, âMartha was pointing out that a bird crashed into the windowâŠItmay not have been the voice of the dead.â
Martha grumpilyinterjected, âPoor thing was probably confused by the number of candles inhere. He thought we were signaling to him.â
âMartha is correct,â Kordeliasaid softly. âLucinda is not present, but that bird is dead.â There was acollective sigh of relief. Kordelia closed her eyes and put her fingerstogether. âWho else would like to ask something of the dead? Address the nameof a lost one, and they may respond.â
âBixby Von Bunson?âCorinthiana asked.
Silence.
âAunt Merriwether?âAugust amusedly set this name forward.
Nothing.
âHercule Poirot?â Kordeliaposed.
A sound was heard, butit was merely Martha knocking over a candle while reaching for another biscuit;the disturbance was quickly classified as a very living sound.
âRecently dead bird?â Crockettasked sadly, looking to the window.
No contact from thebird; Kordelia then explained to the group that the dead (even birds) do notcommunicate until after a full moon phase has passed.
A prolonged silencefilled the space. Each of the gathered looked tentatively between Kordelia andCorinthiana.
âPerhaaaps,âCorinthiana began apprehensively, âtheee voices I heard this morning were not signsof theee dead.â She gingerly placed her finger into Beatriceâs bowl, stroking thefish's silver-blue scales. âBut, I just,â her voice tremored, âI waaanted some sign.In theee riverâŠof aaall plaaaces, where sooo much traaagedy haaas haaappened tooothis faaamilyâŠCaaan weee never haaave closure? Must it aaall be mystery and murder?â
Crockettâs heart feltfor the old woman. For the first time he saw all the trappings of Corinthianastripped awayâher accents, her garish garments, her posturingâall gone, and intheir wake only infinite ripples of grief. The young country girl, who found ahandsome, landed gentleman who promised her a fuller life, merged with the gaudy,outrĂ© matriarch to shape the anguished figure before them. The rest of thefamily felt similarly, their faces conveying empathy and griefâthe squabbling,the blaming, the desire for money, and the old grudges evaporated in the dimcandlelight. August gently reached out and gripped Juneâs hand. Even Marthalooked on Corinthiana with a (tepid) look of understanding.
But it was then thatthe table jumped once more. The door to the study flew open, and a strong breezewhipped through the room making the pages of Kordeliaâs book dance. A largeproportion of the candles blew out, leaving the corners of the room dark.
Then it started slowly,mournfully. It was a tune played from some unseen place. In the darkness, it feltas if it was coming from each shadowed corner. The twitching silhouette of theoak tree danced eerily along with the lilting notes.
The voice that joinedwas distant, muffled.
TheDuck Man, the Duck Man he creeps along the lake.
Thunderhides his footsteps; shadows hide his face.
Corinthiana, her faceso pale her rouge glowed against the white of her cheeks, gripped Beatriceâsbowl tightly. Martha leapt into Robertâs arms, while June jumped away from thetable, a scream erupting from her mouth. Crockett held the table, his knucklesturning white. He felt himself tense, start to lose control, but for the firsttime, a spark of courage resisted the urge to collapse. An odd feeling of calmcollided with his fears and kept his body fully erect.
Childrenhear his heartbeat; they follow after him.
Disappearinto the darkness, their own life growing dim.
Withthe children missing, the parents follow quick.
Butnothing is left of boys and girls but Duck Manâs battered hat.
Themusic stopped suddenly. Crockett looked to August, who was quaking in fear.
âKordelia,âAugust asked quickly, âwhat was that?â
Theyoung girl shook her head, pearl-sized tears forming at the edge of her eyes.âItâs the old song,â she said quietly. ââDuck Man of the Old Hat.ââ She took adeep breath, trying to keep her composure. âItâs the song the ghosts sing alongthe river.â
Chapter 8: The Pot Boils
Theroom was evacuated. August and Crockett helped the women flee, then immediatelyopened all doors to fill it with warmer, brighter light. August took the greatbook from the center table and threw it into the desk, slamming the drawer andlocking it with the key.
Brontë,Petrarch, and May came to the bottom of the stairs, all wearing looks ofwonder.
âWhatâshappened?â
âWeheard noisesâa scream.â
âWasthat music?â
Petrarch,and a reluctant May, took the women into the sitting room, while the shockedMartha sought out Dexter to help prepare tea.
Brontëalone climbed the stairs and peaked in on August and Crockett. Even her arrogantsmile had faded.
âAreyou all right?â she asked tentatively. âFather?â
âFine,âAugust said brusquely. âIt may have just been a coincidence.â
âWhathappened exactly?â She looked between her father and Crockett.
However, August wasalready running down the corridor. âIâll get to the bottom of it!â he yelled,disappearing down the hallway, manic footsteps trailing into the distance.
Crockett went to thewindow. He gazed on the blood of the bird, still freshly smeared on the glass.He shuddered slightly and then turned, his variegated eyes falling on Brontë.
âThat songâŠâ he saidsoftly.
âWhich song?â
âYou didnât hear?â
BrontĂ« shook her head.âMay and I were on the patioâitâs such a beautiful morning. Petrarch left us afew minutes before the chaos to do some work in his room. As soon as we heardthe shrieking, we ran inside. Petrarch arrived at the stair the same moment asMay
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