delphiniums almost luminous.
“Defendant,” Oliver replied.
“Who did he slander?”
“She,” Oliver corrected. “Princess Gisela of Felzburg.”
Henry stopped and turned to face him. “You haven’t taken up the Countess Zorah’s defense, have you?”
Oliver stopped also. “Yes. She’s convinced Gisela killed Friedrich and that it can be proved.” He realized as he said it that that was rather an overstatement. It was a belief and a determination. There was still doubt.
Henry was very grave, his brow wrinkled.
“I do hope you are being wise, Oliver. Perhaps you had better tell me more about it, assuming that it is not in confidence?”
“No, not at all. I think she would like it as widely known as possible.” He started to walk again up the slight slope towards the French doors and the familiar room with its easy chairs by the fireplace, the pictures and the case full of books.
Henry frowned. “Why? I assume you have some idea of her reasons for this? Insanity isn’t a defense for slander, is it?”
Oliver looked at him for a moment before he was quite sure there was a dry, rather serious humor behind the remark.
“No, of course not. And she won’t retract. She is convinced that Princess Gisela murdered Prince Friedrich, and she won’t allow the hypocrisy and injustice of it to pass unchallenged.” He took a breath. “Neither will I.”
They went up the steps and inside. They did not close the doors; the evening was still warm, and the air smelled sweet from the garden.
“That is what she told you?” Henry asked, going to the hall door and opening it to tell the butler that Oliver would be staying to dinner.
“You doubt it?” Oliver asked, sitting in the second-most comfortable chair.
Henry returned. “I take it with circumspection.” He sat down in the best chair and crossed his legs, but he did not relax. “What do you know of her relationship with Prince Friedrich, for example, before Gisela married him?” he asked, looking gravely at Oliver.
Oliver repeated what Zorah had told him.
“Are you sure that Zorah didn’t want to marry Friedrich?”
“Of course she didn’t,” Oliver said. “She is the last sort of woman to wish to be restricted by the bounds of royal protocol. She has a hunger for freedom, a passion for life far too big for …” He hesitated, aware from the look in his father’s eyes that he was betraying himself.
“Perhaps,” Henry said thoughtfully. “But it is still possible to resent someone else taking something from you, even if you don’t especially want it yourself.”
2
M
ONK RECEIVED THE LETTER
from Oliver Rathbone with interest. It came with the first post when he had only just finished breakfast. He read it still standing by the table.
Rathbone’s cases were always serious ones, frequently involving violent crime, intense emotions, and they tested Monk’s abilities to the limit. He liked finding the outer limits of his skill, his imagination, and his mental and physical endurance. He needed to learn about himself far more than most men because a carriage accident three years before had robbed him of every shred of his memory. Except for the flickers, the remnants of light and shadow which danced across his mind, elusively, without warning every now and then, there was nothing. Occasionally those memories were pleasant, like the ones from childhood of his mother, his sister, Beth, and the wild Northumberland coast with its bare sands and infinite horizon. He heard the sound of gulls and saw in his mind’s eye the painted wood of fishing boats riding the gray-green water, and smelled the salt wind over the heather.
Other memories were less agreeable: his quarrels with Runcorn, his superior while he was on the police force. He had sudden moments of understanding that Runcorn’s resentment of him was in large part provoked by his own arrogance. He had been impatient with Runcorn’s slightly slower mind. Hehad mocked his boss’s
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington