Birds of a Feather: 3: Fly the Nest (Bennett Sisters Mysteries Book 16) Lise McClendon (ebook reader with built in dictionary .txt) đ
- Author: Lise McClendon
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A murmur went through the group. Questions arose from several. Finally Isabelleâs voice came through the loudest. âWhat is she doing here then? How did she get Duncan to bring her here?â
Pascal shrugged. âSomehow she insinuated herself into his life.â
Evans stood up, frowning. âSo she knew Gabriel and Sabine were coming here? How could she? We didnât even know.â
Pascal nodded. âThat one we figured out. It was through the agency, Louis Bordeaux, who arranged for Audette and Gini to accompany them here, for the food to be delivered, all the arrangements. Sabine was not organized enough for that. She needed Louis and his French girls. Pauline also works for Bordeaux.â
Isabelle blinked, agitated. âI must wake up Duncan. She is drugging him.â She ran out of the room and up the stairs.
Evans looked baffled. âDrugging him?â
âWe found sedatives in her room,â Conor said. âThatâs why heâs been sleeping so much.â
âBut why?â his father asked.
âMaybe he figured her out,â Elise proposed.
âWeâll know once he wakes up,â Conor said.
Evans looked around the room at his brotherâs astonished face, his sonâs resigned one. Then he rushed toward the hall, a picture of paternal concern. âShe might need some help,â he muttered as he ran up the stairs after his wife.
Ten minutes later Evans returned, ashen-faced, standing in the door of the drawing room. Conversation paused. He looked around the room, found Conorâs eye, then Pascalâs, then his brother Richardâs. He raised his hand, holding something in a white handkerchief.
It was a kitchen knife.
âThisââ He gulped and straightened his shoulders. âThis was under Duncanâs pillow.â
Epilogue
Twelfth Night
âOne more day and sheâd have absolutely given us the slip.â
The Albions, Bennetts, and Pascal dâOnscon sat around the big dining table littered with plates, glasses, and crumbs. The long dinner, the rĂ©veillon, was almost done. âDeliciousâ was the verdict.
It had begun at nine oâclock, as an antidote to the excitement of the arrest of Pauline/AgnĂ©s. She had gone unwillingly, handcuffed, kicking, and shrieking. She later broke down and confessed, according to communications from the Detective Inspector, to some aspects of the death of Sabine. Many questions remained but they were discussed, dissected, and dismembered, along with various dishes of French cuisine.
âWhat was this called again?â Elise asked, holding a fork full of something creamy and smooth.
âCeleriac and parsnips,â Cecily answered. âMashed with truffle butter. My contribution.â
âIt is divine,â Elise declared, eyes wide as she popped a bite into her mouth.
âI could eat it all day long,â Merle agreed.
The meal had begun with five courses of entrĂ©esâ appetizersâ ranging from salmon roe on sliced carrots to green olive tapenade on cucumbers. âJust enough veg to get you started,â Freddy exclaimed happily.
The last big meal of the holiday was always a way to use up all the food in the pantry and fridge, according to Isabelle. It was very French to concoct ways to use every scrap of food. She had instructed the chef on various techniques sheâd used in the past but was pleasantly surprised with Audetteâs innovations. Plus she knew many French recipes by heart, making the long, celebratory meal less stressful for the kitchen staff.
Matching this âLast Supperâ to the rĂ©veillon was declared a genius move by all. The spreading out of each course from the previous one allowed digestion to proceed naturally, Isabelle told them. And for the wine pairing, Aubrey explained. The children had gone to bed, thankfully, as the dessert courses were not due until midnight.
A small slice of tender duck breast with raspberry coulis was followed by fried green tomatoes with shrimp remoulade, then a taste of foie gras on toast points and a flute of champagne. Later there was the boeuf bourguignon and the celeriac and parsnips mash. Elise and Merle had both tried to pace themselves to make it through the enormous meal, taking small bites like a tasting menu, trying to last until the end.
Midway through the rĂ©veillonâ which conspicuously did not include oysters this timeâ there was âla pauseâ for digestion and a discussion of the events of the week.
âWhat the dickens,â Freddy asked, âwas Pauline playing at with Duncan? And where is he anyway?â
âI took him up some supper,â Isabelle said. âHeâs still groggy. Pauline was giving him sedatives to keep him in bed, hiding the knife in the pillowcase. She must have hoped no one would search there.â
âIt fell out when I flipped the pillow over,â Evans said, still a bit shocked by the discovery.
âBut how did she manage to wangle an invitation with Duncan?â Freddy insisted.
Pascal sat back, hands on his stuffed stomach. âWell, I heard she confessed to tricking him into believing that theyâd met before and were, as she put it, more than friends.â He wiggled his eyebrows. âMemory lapses.â
âReally?â Conor said. âPathetic.â
âSheâs a better actor than I would have believed,â Aubrey said.
âWe thought she was just a git,â Freddy added. âA brainless model.â
âThat was the act,â Merle said. âHow long has she known about Gabriel being her father, I wonder. All her life? Or a recent discovery?â
âThat we can only guess for now,â Pascal said.
âBut what happened between her and Sabine?â Elise asked.
Pascal looked at Conor. âWhat did the Inspector tell you?â
âNot much,â Conor said, looking at his parents. âWhat did they tell you?â
Isabelle took a sip of Bordeaux and dabbed her lips. âThat they argued. We know from Gini that they shouted that morning in the carriage house. Then after Sabine went missing, Pauline found her, out by the hedges.â
âShe must have looked for hours,â Elise said.
âShe was gone a long time, yes?â Pascal asked.
âWe left the house about three-thirty,â Elise said.
âShe returned quite a while past dark,â Conor said, âfilthy with mud and leaves. Elise and I had just sat down to soup. We thought
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