eaves, rising shrill and more insistent, and Harry snoring gently next to the hearth, it was Boscombeâs anxiety that came to his mind. He tried to explain it to her, but put into words it sounded so insubstantialâa matter of hesitations that could as easily have been shyness, or even a matter of discretionâthat he felt foolish to have remembered it at all.
He asked after her day: how she was finding the house, and if the work was onerous. He knew she would say it was not, whatever the truth of it. He admired her for that, and was grateful, but it only increased his sense of guilt that he could not give her the standard of comfort she had been used to before they were married.
âOh, very good,â she said wearily. âItâs a lovely house.â She drew in her breath to add something, then changed her mind. He knew what she had been going to sayâthat she wished they could stay there. It was far nicer than the grim accommodation they had in London. Of course Spindlewood and his wife had the vicarage. In the back of Dominicâs mind he was always aware of how callous he had been to his first wife in the long past. He had not thought of it as a betrayal at the time, but it had been, deeply and bitterly so. Perhaps if he had been loyal to her, with or without love, she would not have been murdered.
He did not deserve such a second chance. Looking at Clarice sitting in the chair opposite him, the cat in her lap, her face grave, he was overwhelmed with gratitude.
âExcept for Harry,â she said, still answering his question. âHeâs fine now, but heâs been sulking on the back doorstep half the day.â
âPerhaps he wanted to go out.â He started to rise to his feet.
âNo, he didnât! I know enough to let a dog out now and then,â she protested. âHeâd only just come in. He sat there most of the time, or wandered around the kitchen pawing at the doors, all of them, even cupboards.â
âCould he have been hungry?â he suggested.
âDominic! I fed him. He tries the hall cupboard and the cellar, not just the cupboards with food in. I think he really misses the vicar.â
He sat back in his chair again. âI suppose so. I expect heâll settle. The catâs certainly happy.â
She gave him a quick smile, stroking Etta, who needled her lap happily with her claws then went back to sleep.
Dominic leaned forward and poked the fire, sending sparks up the chimney. Clarice was rightâit was a lovely house. There was almost a familiarity about it, as if at some far distant time he had lived here before and he would know instinctively where everything was. It was like coming home to some origin so far back, he had forgotten he belonged here.
The third morning it was even colder. Clarice could see the village pond from the front door when Dominic went out to begin his visiting. The surface was icing over, and a dusting of white snow made most of it indistinguishable from the banks. Harry went charging out into it and had to be brought back, his chest and tummy caked with snow, and then dried off in front of the kitchen stove, loving the attention.
Clarice did not expect Mrs. Wellbeloved today. After feeding Harry and Etta she set about the sweeping and dusting straightaway, as much to keep warm and busy as from any need for it to be done. The sitting room fire would have to be cleaned out and relit, of course, but since the ashes were still warm, it would be foolish to remove them before time. It was a waste of coal to light it simply for herself, when she could perfectly easily sit in the kitchen.
One day soon she would have to clean out the kitchen stove completely, polish the steels with emery paper, bath brick, and paraffin, black-lead the iron parts and then polish them, then wash and whiten the hearthstone. But it did not have to be today. Such a job should really be begun at six in the morning, so she could