present, however, it was the pragmatic facts she’d revealed that exercised his mind.
Her fears about the attempted burglaries might be simply a figment of an overactive feminine imaginationaroused by what he assumed had been Stolemore’s intimidatory tactics in trying to gain the sale of the house.
She might even have imagined the incidents entirely.
His instincts whispered otherwise.
In his previous occupation, reading people, assessing them, had been crucial; he’d long ago mastered the knack. Leonora Carling was, he would swear, a strong-willed, practical female with a healthy vein of common sense. Definitely not the sort to start at shadows, let alone imagine burglaries.
If her supposition was correct, and the burglaries were connected with Stolemore’s client’s wish to buy her uncle’s house…
His eyes narrowed. The full picture of why she’d come out to beard him formed in his mind. He didn’t, definitely didn’t, approve. Face set, he strolled on.
To the green-painted frontage of Stolemore’s enterprise. Tristan’s lips curved; no one viewing the gesture would have labeled it a smile. He caught sight of his reflection in the glass of the door as he reached for the handle, as he turned it, substituted a more comforting face. Stolemore, no doubt, would satisfy his curiosity.
The bell over the door jangled.
Tristan entered. The rotund figure of Stolemore was not behind his desk. The small office was empty. A doorway opposite the front door was masked by a curtain; it led into the tiny house of which the office was the front room.
Shutting the door, Tristan waited, but there was no sound of shuffling feet, of the lumbering gait of the heavily built agent.
“Stolemore?” Tristan’s voice echoed, far stronger than the tinkling bell. Again he waited. A minute ticked by and still there was no sound.
None.
He had an appointment, one Stolemore would not havemissed. He had the bank draft for the final payment for the house in his pocket; the way the sale had been arranged, Stolemore’s commission came from this last payment.
Hands in his greatcoat pockets, Tristan stood perfectly still, his back to the door, his gaze fixed on the thin curtain before him.
Something was definitely not right.
He drew in his attention, focused it, then walked forward, slowly, absolutely silently, to the curtain. Reaching up, he abruptly drew the folds aside, simultaneously stepping to the side of the doorway.
The jingle of the curtain rings died.
A narrow, dimly lit corridor led on. He entered, keeping his shoulders angled, his back toward the wall. A few steps along he came to a stairway so narrow he wondered how Stolemore got up it; he debated but, hearing no sound from upstairs, sensing no presence, he continued along the corridor.
It ended in a tiny lean-to kitchen built onto the back of the house.
A figure lay slumped on the flags on the other side of the rickety table that took up most of the space.
Otherwise, the room was uninhabited.
The figure was Stolemore; he’d been savagely beaten.
There was no one else in the house; Tristan was certain enough to dispense with caution. From the look of the bruises on Stolemore’s face, he’d been attacked some hours ago.
One chair had tipped over. Tristan righted it as he edged around the table, then went down on one knee by the agent’s side. The briefest examination confirmed Stolemore was alive, but unconscious. It appeared he’d been staggering to reach the pump handle set in the bench at the end of the small kitchen. Rising, Tristan found a bowl, placed it under the spout, and wielded the handle.
A large handkerchief was protruding from the nattily dressed agent’s coat pocket; Tristan took it and used it to bathe Stolemore’s face.
The agent stirred, then opened his eyes.
Tension stabbed through the large frame. Panic flared in Stolemore’s eyes, then he focused, and recognized Tristan.
“Oh. Argh …” Stolemore winced, then struggled to
Janwillem van de Wetering