Standing Alone
By: Heidi
Part Three
"Larabee!"
The
sound of his name broke through the haze of
darkness.
"Larabee!" Bang, bang, bang.
His
mind recoiled from the clattering, attempting a
strategic retreat
from
reality. Distantly, he heard the sound of the door
opening and
boot
heels crossing the room to him.
"Larabee!"
He
didn't move.
"Wake
him up."
A
vice-like grip shook him hard.
Fresh
pain drew him out; he tried to roll away out of
self-
preservation.
"Get
up, Larabee. At least try to be the man I once
respected." He
recognized that voice's owner – Paul Darton – from
a distance since
he
sounded nearer the door than leaning over him like
the other
soldiers.
Chris
bit his lip, refocusing his mind to force the pain
back by
sheer
will. Even in this battered state, he refused to
be less than
a man.
Memory returned, causing him to groan. Opening his
eyes only
showed
semi-darkness inside his cell, and he was deep
within the
shadows
away from the meager light. That groan deepened
when he made
his
body sit up against its protests. "What?" he
half-growled.
The
soldiers left his cell.
"Your
people abandoned you. All your horses, your
grooms, and your
trainer
are gone. Along with any money you had; your
belongings are
missing
too," the captain informed him.
"What?"
Fighting the room's vicious spins and struggling
to keep his
meager
stomach contents down, Chris only heard pieces of
Darton's
information.
"You
stand alone, Larabee. Even those in your employ
realized the
hopelessness of your continued life and abandoned
you."
He
grunted.
"My men
reported you attempted to flee. I thought better
of you; now
I must
revise my opinion," Darton sneered.
It
didn't escape his beleaguered brain's notice that
Captain Paul
Darton
no longer called him Chris or Mister, both signs
of his
changed
fortunes. He could not, however, let the remark
about
attempting to flee pass by unchallenged. "Your men
beat me because
they
wanted to, Paul, and waited until I was secured in
the cell
before
doing so."
"Do not
add telling falsehoods to your crimes, and do not
use my
given
name again. Both my men reported you tried to
escape. I will
believe
their word over the accused murderer imprisoned
before me."
Chris
closed his eyes. "Things are not what they seem."
"No.
You have three weeks' time to improve your
fabrication. The
Magistrate has set your trial then." Darton closed
the door,
plunging him back into the gloom.
In
three weeks, anything could happen. He would
survive until then.
Knowing
Vin left with his people and property eased his
thoughts.
Tanner
would not abandon him; the trainer was making sure
the
valuable stallions found their way to their proper
home. Chris held
no
doubt that Brattenwrighter would claim them as
recompense, along
with
any monies Chris had with him. It truly would not
surprise him
that if
his stallions had stayed here, one or two of them
would
temporarily end up with Davis, with everyone
agreeing that Chris gave
them to
his friend prior to the murder. Vin undoubtedly
believed
that
was a possibility, so he grabbed everything he
could of his
friend's before he left the area.
By now,
they were long gone, and the trainer's trail
experience would
throw
off any pursuers. His livelihood was safe; he need
only worry
about
his life. That was where he held uncertainty. If
the rough
treatment he received so far indicated the pattern
of the next few
weeks,
he might not last.
His
cell's condition was one reason that he doubted
his continued
existence. Made of a dirt floor with stone-and-mud
walls, his only
view of
the outside was a tiny square of a window high
above his
head.
The manacle only allowed him a few scant feet of
uncomfortable
movement, and surely wasn't helping his health.
Nor was the lack of
even a
bucket for personal relief; the nearest corner
smelled foul
from
previous use.
His
head throbbed something fierce; his broken arm
ached; his chest
protested every movement; his stomach threatened
an upheaval; his eye
hurt
where it swelled from its encounter with a fist;
and his legs
announced pain in several places where he had been
kicked, or from
his
involuntary toss down the stairs. Adding insult to
injury was
their
leaving him dressed only in his formerly white
shirt. No
breeches, hose, or shoes were provided; no warm
overshirt or jacket,
and
obviously no blanket to cover with. The cellar was
thick with
dampness with a cool breeze finding its way in
from the one small
window
high up in the cell, giving him periodic chills
from the
drafts.
If the
local Magistrate already set a trial date, the
local law
investigated enough to hear Darton and
Brattenwrighter's accounts.
Those
must have been compelling enough to stop the local
lawman from
even
questioning the supposed suspect. No help would
come from that
quarter. Someone set him up beautifully, where a
conviction and a
hanging
was a near-certainty.
He
tried to remember more of what happened, but heavy
thought was
impossible through the growing, intensifying pain.
His eyes closed
briefly, and did not reopen.
Something struck him in the face. His eyes flew
open, one painful as
it
stretched the swollen skin, and he felt liquid
trailing down his
cheeks
and chin. His tongue slipped out to capture a few
drops, but
it was
not enough.
"There's your water for the day," his jailer
called, then slammed the
door.
Chris
gritted his teeth. He'd seen abuse like this
before; just not
on the
receiving end. It would be a challenge to survive
if the
soldiers intended to pervert the regulations about
providing bread
and
water to prisoners. Where was his bread? He looked
around.
The
door opened again. "Here's your bread, murderer."
It sailed in
a clean
arc over his head to land in the slop corner, a
place Chris
was
forced to use earlier. Laughter echoed in the
small
room.
"Seems I missed." The door closed again.
He
wasn't eating that bread. Using his manacled arm,
he captured a
few
droplets of moisture left on his skin and licked
them off his
fingers. Now all he could do was sit and wait.
Lacking the strength
and
materials to try and set his broken arm properly,
he let it be.
Moving
only aggravated his injuries; sitting still kept
the worst of
the
pain at bay. Figuring he had received today's
allotment of
rations
and hoping he would not be bothered again, he
closed his eyes
to
rest.
They
woke him in the deep of night for another round of
beatings.
The
small window only allowed the tiniest sliver of
moonlight, and
the men
stayed out of the thin strip so he couldn't see
them coming.
Each
hit aimed for an already injured part of his body,
just hard
enough
to irritate it.
He
tried moving away, protecting his body, but they
anticipated his
actions. His eyes adjusted enough to see two
shapes, but his
weakened, manacled state was no defense against
their health and
mobility. It lasted what seemed to be for hours,
but he had no true
sense
of time. When they'd had their fill of fun they
left him,
patting
each other on the back and laughing. The only
measure of
satisfaction he held was that he never cried out
because of the pain;
it was
his pride that refused to bend. When they realized
that, he
would
pay dearly, but until then, it was something he
would hold onto.
He watched the sun
rise to stream through the tiny window, but dozed
during
the late morning and early afternoon hours. Never
really
allowing himself to fall asleep completely, nor
would the pain let
him, he
stayed in one place. When the moonlight appeared
in the
window,
a part of him started to wake up. A second loaf of
bread
rotted
beside the first in the slop corner, and the three
drops he
caught
today did nothing to alleviate the terrible thirst
he felt, or
the
dryness in his throat.
His
door opened. Prepared for another round of slap
the prisoner,
the
identity of his guest surprised him.
"They
buried her today."
The
words hung there between the two of them, a
barrier neither could
cross.
Chris
grunted. His eyes locked on Paul Darton's in the
pale lantern
light,
showing interest without speaking. The idea of
talking seemed
too
painful.
"Tell
me why," Darton asked.
He
formed a three-word response.
"Didn't...kill...her."
"You
were found indecently atop her body in your guest
room, both of
you in
states of undress. Her clothes were ripped. Your
knife with
your
initials engraved upon it was in her heart. Her
blood still
bathes
your body. You were alone with her. Yet you
falsely claim
your
innocence?"
"Truth," he rasped. "Not...me."
"Come,
Larabee, you spoke so well before. Why the
difficulty now?"
Darton
stepped forward and held up the lantern to see
better.
Chris
winced from the brightness.
"Dear
Lord. Why did you say nothing of the extent of
your injuries?"
"Would...you...listen?"
That
stopped Darton from approaching any closer. "They
said you
attempted to flee, and they were forced to subdue
you."
"Beat...me...then...and...again...since." He
watched Darton's
expression closely. It was obvious the Captain's
professional
conscience warred against the man's desire for
justice for the man he
perceived to be already guilty.
"You
are a prisoner under my care, and you will be
treated humanly."
Chris
tried to scoff, coughed, then winced.
"Have
you been fed?"
"Help...yourself." He weakly pointed to the slop
corner with his
manacled hand.
Darton
stepped carefully over to the corner, his light
revealing the
weevil-filled soaked bread. "Your water?"
"What...can…catch...with...mouth."
"I will
return directly." Darton left, plunging the room
back into
darkness.
Chris
dared not to hope; he counted on Darton's sense of
honor for
fair
treatment, but was cautious about how much help
would be
received, and at what price. When he heard the
cell door open again
some
time later, Darton stepped in first. Two big
strong slaves came
next,
followed by two slave women, one considerably
older than the
other,
and both holding several items.
"Your
wounds will be tended and you will be fed
properly. I will not
allow
my prisoner to die of his wounds or mistreatment
before his
trial.
Do we understand each other?"
Chris
nodded. Darton was only offering the treatment he
should have
received in the beginning, and tending of his
wounds to keep him
alive.
This was not being done out of any friendship, but
out of
duty.
Darton would give no more than what was expected
as his
professional responsibility.
He was
unchained and helped to a bench brought in by one
of the slave
men.
They stood defensively on either side of him,
ready for him to
make a
false move and stop him. He had no intention of
doing that.
His own
awareness of his weakened condition would make
losing this
chance
foolish. He was not a fool.
The
women gently bathed him with soft cloths and warm
basin water.
His
shirt was taken from him, leaving him naked for
them to see the
true
extent of his injuries. Darton's face tightened
with anger at
the
obvious signs of abuse, then darkened at the sight
of healing
scratches on his forearms.
Chris
could not stop a groan from escaping when they set
his broken
arm and
splinted it. He winced at the potent cleansers
used to
remove
the ground in dirt. His nose wrinkled at the smell
of the
salves.
Wrapped in fresh bandages, they dressed him
carefully in
borrowed clothes. Made of wool and obviously a
servant's or slave's,
even
though coarse and less than he was use to, they
felt wonderful
to
Chris. Sitting in here wearing only his thin shirt
left him cold
too
often; he was just beginning to feel warm. They
even provided
shoes
and hose.
"Thank...you." He managed. "Very...grateful." He
looked all the
slaves
in the eyes, hoping to convey his gratitude. All
four nodded
in
response. He glanced at Darton, and no words were
necessary; they
understood each other.
"Feed
him," Darton said. "Have someone clean that
corner; we will
not
invite rats in here."
"Yes,
suh." One of the men immediately left, returning
with a tray.
The
older slave woman fed him a warm broth, water, and
bread that was
barely
a day old. It struck him as ironic that he
complained
inwardly about eating too much his first two days
here, yet this
basic
meal filled him better than anything from that
kitchen. Tasted
better,
too. When everything was done, they even brought
in a clean
pallet
with a worn but warm blanket. Now with the clean
cell, full
stomach, clothes, and his wounds tended, Chris
felt marginally
better,
though he still felt the chills and energy drain
from the
hint of
a fever. The slaves left, taking their supplies
with them.
"My
thanks again, Captain," Chris said, sufficiently
recovered to
speak.
"I was
unaware of your plight, Larabee. Some through my
own
stubbornness, and the rest through ignorance. Now
that I am, you
will be
treated decently. I confess to be conflicted.
Usually I am
a good
judge of character, yet your actions prove me
false."
"Your
judgment is not impaired, for I am not responsible
for
Katherine's death."
"So you
say." Darton looked disappointed for some reason.
"Someone struck me from behind, and that person
has arranged for me
to hang
for murder. I wished no ill on Katherine."
"Do not
use her name!" Darton snapped. "She was a friend
of many
years
to me, and you, a man I thought to call friend,
stand accused
of her
heinous death."
Chris
fell silent. He understood Darton's conflict, and
knew any
further
protests of innocence would only worsen things
between them.
There
was still time to raise doubt in the captain's
mind.
"I must
go. Clarissa needs me." Darton left.
The
prisoner stretched out on his pallet, still
manacled, but with
slightly more freedom than before. He didn't
expect a beating
tonight; Darton's personal interest into his
wellbeing should serve
as a
deterrent.
"Chris."
His
name was a whisper, diving through the level of
unconsciousness
and
dragging him reluctantly awake. He was warm, and
did not want to
lose
that.
"Get
up, ya arse."
Only
one person could get away with calling him an arse.
He sat up
gingerly, peering into the darkness. No one was
there. Great, he
thought, now I'm dreaming.
"'Bout
time ya moved."
His
head lifted to the window, the source of the
voice.
"I
ain't got long, but I'm tellin' ya I'm here.
Help's on the way."
Chris
smiled at the sound of Vin's voice. He asked two
questions
that
had been bothering him. "You? Horses?"
"Fine,
and the stallions should be gettin' home in a
couple days.
Had
t'take the long way t'not be stopped. Ya doin'
okay?"
"Better
now. What have you heard?"
"Once
word spread ya were arrested fer murder, we lit
outta here."
"Glad
you did."
"Got
things situated with the horses, sent a groom
ahead t'get Travis
up
here. Local law accepts the lobsterback's version
so they're
content
t'let them keep ya prisoner. Got orders ya were a
British
prisoner. Talked t'a few folks, then let it drop.
That's the
rumors;
only been back a few hours. Hidin' from everyone;
don't
wanna
let them know I'm here."
"Don't
let anyone find you."
"Hell,
I'm too good fer that. Someone set ya up good."
A sense
of relief filled him; he didn't know until Vin
said it how
important it was to him that this man believed him
innocent.
"Larabee?"
"Yeah?"
He managed over a lump in his throat.
"Gotta
go. Be careful, and we'll get ya out."
"Thanks. Watch your back."
"Always."
The
silence wrapped around him again, but this time it
wasn't so deep
or
lonely. He was no longer alone.
Vin
hated the fact he couldn't help Chris any more
than watching out
for
him. His friend had been beaten and battered; that
much was
obvious, but had been treated well since then. He
wanted to break
him out
of the cell, yet that would be foolishness. Chris
was too
well
known in their part of North Carolina to run. It
also wasn't in
Larabee's nature; he faced threats head on. He
would want his name
cleared.
The
only thing Vin could do was watch, listen, and
learn. He made
himself
a camp in the woods, using the trees, leaves, and
bushes to
disguise his presence. He would bide his time
until the others he
sent
for arrived. If he happened to be in the area of a
conversation
about
this Scandal, well, he would listen. It would not
be his fault
if
someone gave him information that would help clear
his friend.
He
settled into his bedroll and dozed. Just seeing
Chris was okay
for now
was enough for him.
Magistrate Orin Travis could not believe his ears.
Larabee's groom,
Michael
Miller, nervously shifted from foot to foot,
having delivered
the bad
news and now fielded questions.
"You
did nothing to release him?" he asked again.
"Mr.
Tanner ordered us to go with the horses. Said
they'd be taken
otherwise, and that weren't right."
"Our
messenger would be correct," Ezra Standish
remarked quietly. He
shifted
forward in his seat. "Recompense."
"I
know," Travis agreed. "Whether or not Mr. Larabee
was guilty,
just
the accusation would justify the temporary taking
of them until
guilt
was proven. What did you hear?"
"Nothing fact, sir," Miller said.
"The
rumors, then." The Magistrate motioned Miller the
groom turned
messenger to continue.
"That
Mr. Larabee was found atop the dead girl, both
weren't dressed,
and his
knife – the one you gave him – was in her heart."
"Anything else?"
"Heard
tell he tried to run and the soldiers beat him.
That's all,
sir. We
left right fast."
"Thank
you, Mr. Miller. Rest yourself from your ride.
Angela will
serve
you food and drink."
The
groom left Magistrate Travis's study gratefully,
relief evident
on his
features for completing his task.
"Ezra,
are you familiar with the Brattenwrighter family
at all?"
"In
passing. If I am not mistaken, Mr. Brattenwrighter
supports the
Crown
beyond his obligations."
"He
does. When I learned Matthew Davis was going, I
guessed he was
either
rallying for or reaffirming support."
"Either
way, Mr. Larabee has very slim chances of
exonerating himself
alone."
"Precisely why we are going."
"Let me
fetch a bag."
"You
will need this." Travis reached over to hand Ezra
a thick
book.
"Learn what you can as quickly as you can."
"Legal
procedures?"
"It
would be inappropriate for me to represent Chris.
I can,
however, attend as a spectator and fellow
Magistrate."
"I do
believe you want me to convince the locals I am a
barrister,
correct?" Ezra lifted a brow in question.
"I said
nothing of the sort." The look Travis wore gave
lie to his
words.
"Excuse
me, then. I have much to prepare."
"One
hour, then. Bring your reading glasses for the
carriage ride."
"I have
no need of glasses," Ezra huffed.
Something or someone was in the cell with him. He
could feel it, but
his
eyes discerned nothing in the darkness. Not even
the moon gave
him the
briefest flicker of light. The sensation of being
watched
intensified.
"Hello?" he called out, wiping the sweat from his
brow.
No one
answered.
He
stared into the blackness, and it wavered on him.
The more he
tried
to focus, the worse his head hurt. Giving up, he
let his eyes
close
and slipped back into a restless sleep.
"Chris," Vin hissed for the third time. Crouched
outside the small
cell,
he was desperately trying to rouse his friend.
Deciding to
take a
chance, Vin threw a pebble through the iron bars,
his sharp
eyes
seeing it strike on the side of his friend's neck.
Larabee's hand slowly wiped at the spot.
"Chris."
"What?"
Eyes opened and blinked several times.
"Wake
up."
"Awake."
"Sure
ya are. Shake the cobwebs from yer brain."
"Vin?"
Even
from this distance, Vin could see the bandages had
been
changed. That eased one worry, but the slow
reaction time concerned
him.
"It's me. How are ya?"
"Better."
"Reckon
so. Everyone's talkin', makin' up stories. Haven't
heard
anythin'
close ta t'truth yet."
"Hanging me either way."
"I'll
prove ya didn't do it. Just gotta stay tough."
"That's
me. Tough."
The
words sounded a little slurred and off from
Chris's usual speech
pattern. "Ya sure ya feel all right?"
"Just
dandy."
That
said, Vin watched Chris fall back asleep. Fever;
he was sure of
it.
Those damn lobsterbacks left him hurt and untended
for too
long.
One or more of his wounds were sure to be
infected, causing
the
fever. From the looks of it, and what he saw from
the woods,
they
were taking care of him now, but that care might
be too little
too
late. It wouldn't do for their prime suspect to
die before his
farce
of a trial, he thought wryly. The only reason
Chris was still
alive
was they wanted the trial.
Hearing
the soldiers preparing for their scheduled rounds
around the
building, he slipped away quietly back into the
woods. Now was not
the
time to reveal his presence. He returned to his
camp to keep
watch
on his friend.
Morning
brought light. Light hurt. Chris tried to shy away
from
it. He
felt hot and cold at the same time.
"Larabee?"
He
listened.
"You
killed my daughter. I will see you hang."
He
didn't answer; that would take too much energy.
Brattenwrighter
could
say whatever he wanted, and did; but it did not
affect him
now. He
let himself drift into the haze.
Darton
stared at his prisoner. He was summoned when
Katherine's
father
received no reaction to his tirade. It was obvious
fever had
taken a
harsher hold on the prisoner during the night, so
he ordered
the
healer back to tend the patient. Her expression
told him it was
worse
than he thought; too many of the wounds were
infected and
needed
draining.
The
fever slowly rose through the day and night,
forcing Darton to
leave
the healer in the cell with him, along with her
man to protect
her and
a soldier just outside the door. Darton stayed
throughout
the
entire ordeal just inside the cell, but against
the back wall.
Larabee
started ranting when day turned into night.
"My . .
. fault," he moaned once.
"What's
your fault?" Darton asked.
"Dead .
. . I . . . did . . . my fault . . . dead."
"Who?"
He leaned forward, curious about this man's
apparent
confession.
"Sarah.
Adam. Gone . . . my fault . . . dead."
"Sarah
and Adam who?"
"Wife .
. . son," he cried out. "Dead . . . my fault . . .
boat
sank.
Should . . . should be me." He curled into a ball
after the
last
painful declaration and wept.
Darton
felt ashamed to have jumped to a conclusion about
the other
two
people; this man deeply loved his family. At one
point during
the
long night, he felt the sensation of being
watched. He looked
all
around, but saw no one. His men searched the area
and found
nothing.
The
fever worsened, and it seemed with the break of
dawn that Larabee
was
weakened to the point of death. Whether or not the
man survived
was up
to his will, and up to a higher power.
Vin saw
Chris being treated, and he desperately wanted to
go to his
friend.
Again, it wasn't the time. He could only hope that
Chris
made it
through the night, and then the next day, and the
day after
that.
For a lobsterback, he'd learned Darton was
honorable. His
professional and personal pride was at stake to
make sure that he
kept
his prisoner alive for trial, and this man was
taking that
responsibility seriously.
He
sighed. There was nothing for him to do, and the
waiting only
made
him restless. They were trapped in their places -
Chris in his
struggle to live in his cell, and Vin on the
outside looking in.
Desperately wishing he could be there to help his
friend.
"What a
lovely locale," Ezra sniffed. He stared around his
attic
room in
the rundown tavern with distaste. Since
Brattenwrighter
owned
the majority of lands around here, and was the
preeminent power
in the
area, a simple barrister for the accused was not
precisely
welcome. Standing up straight was impossible; the
room held a bed,
chest,
and chipped water basin. His bag took up the
majority of the
floor
space, and he shuddered when contemplating the
sagging mattress.
He
sighed. During the long carriage ride here, he
occupied himself
with
reading the book, and Travis gave him pointers
about how to
defend
Chris at trial, along with showing him certain
pages that
pertained to what to do in certain situations. His
brain still
reeled
from the amount of information poured into it.
Then to be
treated
so badly when they arrived, it was all abominable.
Magistrate Travis was given a warm welcome. It was
only when he
explained that Ezra was Mr. Larabee's barrister
that the frost
developed in the room. The innkeeper had his wife
show Travis to the
Master
Room, while Ezra was grudgingly led to this
wretched spot.
Fortunately, Travis was accompanying him to the
Brattenwrighter house
and
making introductions, preventing them from
snubbing him
outright. He brushed the travel dust from his
clothes before meeting
the
Magistrate outside.
Their
journey to the house was uneventful. Things only
grew lively
when
they arrived, and were shown to the front parlor.
Travis had
already
indicated he would not be too friendly with Ezra,
other than
to
introduce him as the person retained by the
Larabee estate and
familiar to the Magistrate.
When
Brattenwrighter entered to greet them, his
expression was
guarded. Dressed in the black of traditional
mourning, Travis's
status
as Magistrate was the only reason they were
accepted into the
home.
"Gentlemen."
They
stood out of respect.
"Mr.
Brattenwrighter, forgive our intrusion during your
time of
mourning. I am Magistrate Travis, and this is Mr.
Standish. Our
condolences on your loss."
"Mr.
Standish, Magistrate, thank you for your kind
words. How may I
assist
you?"
"I
intend to be here for the trial of Mr. Larabee, an
acquaintance of
mine
from New Berne, and wanted to inform you of my
presence. Also,
I
wished to ease your mind that I am not here to
interfere."
"That
does ease my mind, Magistrate. I take it you have
a personal
interest in the outcome?"
"Yes. I
find it hard to accept what has happened, yet I
plan to keep
an open
mind and watch justice be done."
"I find
it hard to accept, myself. It seems we were all
fooled by
Mr.
Larabee's behavior. Mr. Standish, are you the
Magistrate's
secretary?"
"No,
sir. I have been retained by Mr. Larabee's estate
to represent
him.
Magistrate Travis kindly shared his carriage with
me. I felt
it
important to make contact with you and inform you
of my purpose
instead
of allowing the gossipmongers to tell you."
Brattenwrighter paused. "I respect your coming
here and presenting
yourself, Mr. Standish. I do prefer to be informed
of the
developments in my daughter's...case." He
swallowed hard, turning
away
from them briefly. Taking a shaky breath, the
father
continued, "I cannot, however, offer you my
hospitality."
"I
would not expect you to, Mr. Brattenwrighter. I
have taken a room
at the
local inn."
"What
do you want from me?" Brattenwrighter's face
hardened.
"Access
to Mr. Larabee currently detained on your
property, therefore
needing
your permission to enter the grounds of a family
in
mourning. I would prefer your authorization to ask
questions of
those
present. If you would like to sit in on any or all
of the
questioning, you are more than welcome."
"The
access I will provide, so there will be no doubt
of the fairness
in this
trial. The questions, however, I will need to
think on. May
I speak
plainly?"
"Please," Ezra indicated with a motion of his
hand.
"He was
found over my daughter, Mr. Standish. I do not
feel I could,
in good
conscience, help you exonerate him."
"Again,
perfectly understandable. My reasons are to make
sure that I
understand precisely what happened." Ezra kept his
face with a
sympathetic expression, fully aware that this man
could easily deny
permission for Ezra to come on the property to see
Chris, and
seriously prevent him from doing any type of
investigation. "I have
not
spoken with the local constabulary yet, or with
those in charge
of Mr.
Larabee's detention. We came directly here after
obtaining
lodging."
Brattenwrighter nodded. "Captain Darton has been
charged with Mr.
Larabee's confinement. I will have someone take
you down for
introductions. Sheriff Snyder investigated,
concurred with Captain
Darton,
and agreed to hold Mr. Larabee here since he does
not have
the
appropriate facilities. Magistrate, will you
remain here, or
accompany Mr. Standish?"
"Accompany Mr. Standish, if you have no objection.
We would like to
make
our arrival as discreet as possible."
"I am
appreciative of that, gentlemen." Brattenwrighter
rang for a
footman. "My footman will take you to Captain
Darton. Your access
to my
property will be within reason, Mr. Standish."
"I will
be judicious in my hours, Mr. Brattenwrighter."
They
took their leave of the grieving father, following
the footman
to the
slave quarters without speaking. Captain Darton
apparently
had
been summoned, arriving just after them.
"Gentlemen," the officer greeted. He swung down
off his horse,
passing
the reins to a private. "I am Captain Darton."
"Magistrate Travis and Mr. Standish."
"Mr.
Brattenwrighter's man informed me you wished to
have access to
the
prisoner. May I ask you to state your business?"
"An
acquaintance, Captain," Travis replied. "Mr.
Standish has been
retained to represent Mr. Larabee."
"I see.
Magistrate, will you be involved in the trial
itself?"
"As a
spectator only."
Darton
inclined his head. "Mr. Standish, I would
appreciate it if
you
were to notify me of visits in advance, so that I
can alleviate
any
discomfort on the Brattenwrighter family."
"Of
course. When I know the times of my arrival, I
will gladly
inform
you." Ezra smiled at the Captain; he needed this
man's
cooperation. "Will I be allowed privacy with Mr.
Larabee?"
"Within
reason. I am to make sure that he does not
escape."
"I
would not attempt that endeavor; Mr. Larabee will
want to clear
his
name. He values his reputation greatly."
"Then I
will not delay you any longer. If I may ask you to
hand over
any
weapons?"
"My
knife," Ezra said. He passed the blade he used to
open crates to
the
Captain. His gun was left behind per Magistrate
Travis's strong
suggestion. "I prefer to have it back, thank you."
"It
will be returned when you leave. Magistrate, you
have no weapons
of
note?"
"No,
Captain. I prefer my wit to act as my weapon."
"If
only more felt that way," Darton lamented. "Please
follow me."
He led
them through the door, then down the dank
stairwell to a room
at the
end of a long hallway. They passed several open
doors, the
purpose
of the rooms obvious by the manacles dangling from
the
ceiling, or the pallets lining the floor. The
smell worsened the
further
down they traveled, yet neither man covered his
nose and
mouth.
A
soldier was stationed at the bottom of the stairs,
and another
outside
the door. He snapped to attention in the presence
of the
captain, stepping aside at the nonverbal command.
Darton opened the
small
window near the top of the door.
"Larabee, you have guests. Stay where you are."
The captain paused,
then
unlocked the door with a key on a ring taken from
the soldier
now
five feet down the hallway.
Ezra's
first look at Chris when Darton gave them access
caused him
serious
consternation. His friend was pale, stretched out
on a
pallet,
and obviously weak. He made no effort to rise,
only staring
at them
with glazed eyes. "What has happened to him?"
"Fever.
Only the efforts of the slave healer kept him
alive. It
finally
broke this morning, leaving him very weak. I
should have
warned
you."
"How
was he injured?" Travis asked.
Darton
stared at the floor. "During the confusion, my men
were
overzealous in following my orders. They believed
he was attempting
to
flee, yet he was disoriented from the wound on his
head. My
orders
were for him to be subdued if he tried to leave,
and they took
things
too far. After that, the grisly circumstances
caused them to
take
out their horror on him. They have been
disciplined, and are no
longer
on this detail."
The
Magistrate scowled.
"I must
also admit fault in his initial care. Miss
Brattenwrighter
was a
personal friend, and I was attending to her
family. Those
soldiers felt that they had license, out of
loyalty to me, to
mistreat him. I rectified the situation once I was
aware of it, but
he
suffered because of it. Magistrate, if you care to
file a
complaint with my superior, I will not protest
it."
"I will
not," Travis said. "So long as Mr. Larabee's
treatment
continues to be humane."
"I
shall see to it," Darton promised. "I will leave
you to your
conversation. Just knock loudly on the door to
exit." He left.
"Chris?" Ezra immediately knelt down beside his
friend, bringing
himself
closer so the man did not have to look up to see
him.
"Ezra."
"At
least he recognizes me," Standish said to Travis.
"You
are quite hard to forget," the Magistrate replied,
a trace of
humor
in his voice.
Ezra
rolled his eyes.
"Didn't
. . .do. . .it," Chris gasped out. His one hand
shook as
weakly
reached up to grasp Standish's shirt front. "Not .
. . me."
Standish grasped the hand tightly. "I know. When
you are better, we
will
talk about it. Rest now." He could see his friend
was entirely
too
weak to go into the details of what happened. Much
as he hated
to
leave Chris in this place, locked up, he must. "We
will be back
shortly. Do you understand? We will be back once
you are recovered."
Larabee
nodded, squeezed the clasped hand, then let go.
After
they left the cell, Ezra and Travis requested a
private
audience with Captain Darton. He took them to a
room in the upstairs
quarters, closing the door behind them with orders
left with his
people
not to disturb them.
"Captain, could you give me an accounting? Mr.
Larabee is not in a
position to speak right now, and I would like to
hear what happened,"
Ezra
requested.
"The
maid went into his room to replace the water in
his basin. She
found
him atop Miss Brattenwrighter, and blood staining
the sheets
beneath. She screamed, rousing me from a nearby
room. I entered to
find
him still in that position and he did not respond
immediately to
his
name. He was dressed only in his shirt, and it was
quite obvious
to me
she was no longer alive. His hands pinned hers
down above her
head.
When he finally woke enough to move, he lifted up
and I saw
the
knife in her heart. Larabee was rolled off onto
the floor."
"You
said he was unresponsive. Was he injured at that
time?" Ezra
asked.
"Yes.
He claimed he had been struck in the back of the
head. We
found a
pewter tankard dented on the floor, along with
scratches
along
his forearms."
"I see.
Please continue." Ezra noticed Travis stayed
silent,
perhaps
to learn the entirety of it before asking his own
questions.
"I
checked Miss Brattenwrighter's body myself, and
there was no
life."
Darton swallowed hard. "Her father arrived right
around
then,
and he was extremely upset. Larabee repeatedly
protested his
innocence, but he had fallen deeply into his cups
the night before.
There
are witnesses to his consumption. I question
whether he would
remember."
Ezra
nodded, noticing the lack of respect given to
Chris by Darton
not
using the title mister.
"I then
ordered my men to take him to the slave cells that
Mr.
Brattenwrighter stated we could use, and that was
the last I saw of
him for
some time. Not too long after the incident began,
his
trainer
took all of Larabee's belongings, horses, and
grooms away
from
here. May I assume he was able to get word to his
employer's
estate?"
"One of
the grooms came to see me, and Mr. Standish was
retained
directly after. We came once we heard, but we have
not seen Mr.
Tanner," Travis informed him.
"Could
I impose on you to name the family members, so
that I will not
appear
uninformed or unintentionally offend someone in my
ignorance?"
Ezra
asked.
"You
have met Mr. Brattenwrighter. His other daughter,
Mrs. Clarissa
Kingston, was Larabee's meal partner throughout
most of the weekend.
Mr.
Gerald Pierce was Miss Brattenwrighter's intended;
their nuptials
should
have been this coming weekend. Mrs. Brethsby was
the
governess; she has stayed on until the trial."
"Thank
you, Captain Darton, for your time. Magistrate,
did you have
any
questions?"
"Not
right now, Mr. Standish. If you will excuse us,
Captain, we
will be
heading back to the inn."
"Of
course. Mr. Standish, will I see you tomorrow?"
"Yes,
around ten a.m., if that is acceptable?"
Darton
nodded, then showed them out.
Ezra
was not surprised when Travis spoke in the
carriage.
"Find
the servants; they know what really happened.
Chris could not
have
done this."
"I
agree, Magistrate."
"Good.
We start tomorrow."
Their
arrival at the tavern and subsequent meal together
raised some
eyebrows, but Ezra went up to his room long before
the Magistrate
after
loudly thanking him for the use of the carriage
and the ride
down.
He opened his door, prepared to read more in the
book Travis
provided.
A hand
grabbed onto him and pulled him into the room,
while a palm
covered
over his mouth. "Ez, it's me. Keep quiet."
Relief
coursed through him. Vin held him, and probably
wanted no one
to know
that they knew each other well yet, or that he was
even
here.
He nodded.
"Reckon
it's good t'see yer ugly face."
"And
such a pleasure to see you," he retorted. "What
exactly
happened here?"
"Someone wants Chris t'hang fer murder. Been
hearin' plenty, but
later.
How's Chris?"
"Weak.
The fever took much out of him."
"Hell.
I couldn't get t'him, and breakin' him out only
would've made
things
worse."
"You
did the right thing, my friend." Ezra patted Vin'
shoulder
trying
to ease the guilt he knew the man was feeling. "I
heard an
accounting from the British captain of what he
saw, and it does not
bode
well for Mr. Larabee."
"I
figured that. Things there are too twisted fer
words."
"Tell
me what you know." He settled on one end of the
bed, winced
when it
creaked alarmingly, and then indicated for Vin to
use the
other
end.
"Nice
room ya got here."
"Representing the murderer has its benefits," he
cracked.
"Easy
fer me t'get in; just climb the trees t'the roof,
then back
down
again. No one sees me either way."
"You're
stalling, my friend."
Vin
blew out a breath. "I ain't heard nothin' that
could help
Chris."
Ezra
stared steadily into the blue eyes.
"Rumors. Gerald Pierce was havin' an affair with
the older sister
Clarissa."
"Mrs.
Kingston?"
"Aye,
though they say she has ice in her veins and her
bed."
Ezra
nodded.
"The
governess dragon-lady, Mrs. Brethsby, hated Miss
Brattenwrighter
because
she did not listen to her."
"Charming."
"Miss
Brattenwrighter was supposedly a light-skirt,
which didn't sit
well
with Mrs. Brethsby. Heard one of Darton's men
boastin' he
enjoyed
a night with her the first night he was here."
"What
else?"
"One
o'the servants spoke about Miss Brattenwrighter
playin' games
with
Chris under the table at the welcomin' dinner."
"I
thought Chris was Mrs. Kingston's dinner partner."
"He
was."
Ezra
sighed.
"Ya
sure he was okay? I can only look in on him late
at night when
the
lobsterbacks ain't watchin' the outside too
close."
"He was
weak, but he recognized me. A good sign that he
shall
recover."
Vin
allowed a small smile at Ezra's humor, "Good."
Ezra
paused. "It wasn't your fault, Vin."
"What?"
"I can
see you are blaming yourself. There was nothing
you could
have
done to prevent this."
"How
can ya say that now? Ya ain't been here but half a
day."
"Because if there was something you could have
done, you would have
done
it. If you sensed he was in danger, you would have
stayed with
him all
the time. This was not planned, nor expected."
"Reckon
I'll have t'think on that. Time fer me t'go. Chris
should
be
wakin' soon, and I wanna see that."
"Be
safe, my friend."
Part Four
Vin
left Ezra's room and rode back to
Brattenwrighter's estate
through
the woods. His horse was left at the hidden pond,
while he
made
his way to his camp. Once there, he snuck forward
to his watch
post,
using his spyglass to keep an eye on the soldiers.
Ezra's
words
continue to run through his head. No matter how
much he wished
he
could have stayed by Chris's side, it would have
been
uncomfortable for both of them. It wouldn't have
seemed proper and
Chris
would have been angry at the snubs and have said
something to
ruin
this trip.
He
didn't care about how Society saw him; he cared to
surround
himself
with good friends, excellent horses and acceptance
when he
wasn't
on the sea at the wheel of Vengeance. For all his
concern,
Society
could stuff itself. Right now, he was worried
about Chris,
and he
wanted to be there with him.
Hours
passed until he finally found the chance to sneak
to Chris's
window.
Larabee was sleeping, so he let him rest. Nearly
losing him
to the
fever while outside looking in took a toll on Vin,
one that he
could
bear for now. His friend needed his strength back,
and no
matter
his personal feelings, he would not interrupt the
healing
process
just to talk to him.
He woke
with a sense of clarity he did not have before.
Chris
stretched as much as his injuries allowed, used
the bucket provided,
and
then made himself comfortable on the pallet. He
chose not to sit
up; to
do so would only aggravate his injuries. Worried
about his
fever,
he wondered if seeing Ezra yesterday was a dream.
That
was answered when he heard the soldier say, "Mr.
Standish, I
will be
right down the hall. If you encounter any
problems, please
call
out. When you wish to leave, just yell."
A
moment of joy entered Larabee's heart, warming him
from the inside
out. He
was not alone.
"Thank
you, Private." Ezra stepped into the cell, staring
down at
Chris.
"Don't get up."
Chris
smirked. "Don't intend to."
Standish dragged the stool left there for changing
bandages over to
the
edge of the pallet. "I have been retained as your
barrister.
Magistrate Travis was gracious enough to bring me
here, then we
parted
company." Shrewd green eyes communicated silently.
He got
the message - Travis was not going to interfere
directly, but
what he
learned indirectly would be funneled through Ezra.
They were
only
going to play the part of acquaintances, not true
friends and
whatever else they were because of Travis helping
bankroll the
building and continued existence of the Vengeance.
Chris
remarked, "That was kind of him."
"Very.
He visited for a short time yesterday, but you
needed your
rest."
Ezra cocked his head to one side, indicating with
a subtle
thumb
pointed to the door that the guard had not walked
away and
listened.
"Thank
you for coming." Chris said.
"Do not
mention it. We must discuss what happened. Are you
feeling
well
enough?"
Chris
rolled his eyes. "I will feel better out of here."
"Understandable. What do you remember?" Ezra gave
him a small smile,
then
leaned close so the words would not carry to the
hallway.
"I was
getting some air. Had to answer the call of
nature, and
someone
struck me from behind. I woke up to screaming."
"The
scene was explained to me. How much did you
drink?"
"More
than I should have," Chris grumbled.
"Meaning you were overpowered quickly?"
"Yes.
Humiliating."
"More
than one person?"
"I
think so. I hope so. Pride couldn't take it if
there was only
one."
"There
would have to be," Ezra mused aloud. "If you were
unconscious, a woman could not lift you. A man
would struggle with
your
dead weight, and someone would have seen that."
"Yes,"
Chris mused.
"So who
did you anger while you were here?" The teasing
note in
Ezra's
voice took the sting out of the words.
"I
found out things I should not have known, and was
discovered once."
"Tell
me all of it."
"Mr.
Pierce and Mrs. Kingston were having a liaison."
"Even
though he and Miss Brattenwrighter were to be
married.
Interesting. The liaison was a rumor passed on to
me."
"Fact."
"You
know this how, my friend?"
"Walking from the stables to the house, heard them
in the woods. Not
a good
time." He winked once.
"Ah."
Ezra cleared his throat to hide his smile.
"Almost
got away without them hearing me, but Captain
Darton called
out my
name. The couple covered their tryst, but I think
they knew I
knew."
"Did
you inform anyone?"
"No.
Seems Katherine already knew; told me during our
dance.
Earlier
I overheard her and her governess talking about
how she
shouldn't be having relations with Mr. Pierce
prior to the wedding,
or with
a soldier."
"With
Mr. Pierce? That I did not know. The soldier I
knew."
"And
she tried to get me."
"Foot
games under the table?"
Chris
flushed. "You heard about that?"
"One of
the servants saw. That will come out."
"Along
with me hearing Mr. Pierce say that Katherine
needed to be out
of the
way, or Mrs. Brethsby telling her that her actions
would get
her
killed?"
"I will
be sure to bring that up."
"Then
there's her father."
Ezra's
jaw dropped. "What about her father?"
"He was
berating her about her behavior before my dance
with her,
telling
her that her harlot behavior would stop."
"Dear
Lord, the intrigue. It just makes my stomach
churn."
"It
only gets more complicated."
"Pray
tell." Ezra's voice held considerable parts
disbelief,
curiosity, and sarcasm.
"Darton's
interested in Clarissa, the older sister, but he
was
unaware, and still is, of her trysts with Pierce."
"Lovely."
"I
thought so." Chris made a face.
"Yet
you stayed through all this farcical melodrama?"
"I
couldn't wait to leave Sunday morning. And there's
one more
person
involved."
"Let me
guess - Governor Martin? It seems he was the only
one not
involved."
"Close.
Matthew Davis."
"What?"
Ezra nearly leapt from his stool.
Chris
enjoyed watching Ezra's jaw drop open. "Katherine
made a
statement that she and Pierce were not going to go
beyond the Crown's
minimum
expectations and requirements. That was heard by
everyone
present
in the ballroom. The music had stopped, and she
was quite
loud.
Davis did not like that. He left to go talk to
her."
"Machiavelli
could not plan this better." Standish rubbed his
forehead with one hand.
"Whoever set me up stripped me, killed her, and
staged the scene."
"Then
someone saw something, and someone knows something
they aren't
saying.
I must check into this."
"Be
careful, or we will share this cell. No offense,
but I'd rather
leave
than get a roommate."
"This
cell and the company would be an improvement over
my room, but
I will
endeavor for your freedom."
Chris
managed a laugh.
"I
should let you rest," Ezra said.
"I'm
fine."
"You
need your strength," his friend replied. "We will
talk
tomorrow." He called out for the guard, no
surprise on his face when
the
door opened immediately.
Chris
watched him go, knowing that the master of
intrigue would
slowly
unravel this puzzle.
Vin
caught Ezra staring into the woods when he left
the slave
quarters, and read that as a signal that he wanted
to meet. Making
his way
to the inn, he snuck into the man's tiny room
without being
seen.
"What did ya find out? How is he doin'?" The
questions came
out
quickly before he could call them back.
"Much
better, but I require your help. Check with the
maids, charm
them,
do whatever, but discover whether or not someone
saw Chris
being
dragged from the path to the stable up to the
house. He would
have
been unconscious, and someone must have seen
something."
"Reckon
ya want me ta let them know I'm here?"
"I
think you have the resources to discover the
information
discreetly." Ezra grinned at him.
"I can
do that." He thought about Miss Mary Lou's niece,
and her
knowledge about everything that happened here.
"What else?"
"The
fiancιe and the sister were indiscreet with each
other. Find
out how
indiscreet before I question them."
"Ya
think the poor murdered girl knew about it
before?"
"Chris
said she did. We may not know what precisely
happened between
them,
but there was a rather public argument between the
victim and
Pierce
about their loyalty to the Crown the night of the
ball. Our
dear
friend Matthew Davis was not pleased."
"I
doubt he would be," Vin replied. "That all?"
"Would
it be too much to ask to learn the stories about
the sister
Mrs.
Kingston, the governess Mrs. Brethsby, and Mr.
Pierce? I
sincerely doubt her father would be responsible at
this point in
time. A
father wouldn't set the scene the way it was,
unless he
truly
hated her."
"She
was his favorite; that much I know fer sure," Vin
supplied.
"Then
we will focus on the other four."
"I can
tell ya about the sister, or some of it." Vin told
Ezra what
he
learned from Miss Mary Lou, and added the few
details he'd learned
since
then.
"Very
interesting," Ezra remarked. "I will wait to hear
from you."
Vin
found himself in Nadine's cabin on the
Brattenwrighter property.
She was
happy to see him again and more than willing to
tell him all
about
the people in the main house. Since
Brattenwrighter tricked
her
mother into indenture, then charged her for
everything he could
that so
that she could never get out, Nadine's mother -
Miss Mary
Lou's
sister - held a strong hatred for the
Brattenwrighter family.
That
hatred spilled over into a willingness to talk to
Vin about what
she and
her mother knew. It took hours to learn the
history of the
Brattenwrighter family, followed by the tragedies
surrounding the
older
sister, and finally an account of the intertwined
pasts of the
Pierce
family and the Brattenwrighters.
When he
left, there was much to digest. He found his camp,
watched
for a
while, and then listened for the guard. At the
appropriate
time,
he worked his way to Larabee's window. "Chris!"
"Vin."
His
friend's voice answered him almost immediately.
"How
are ya?"
"Better. Ezra's here."
"I saw
him. He's got me workin'."
Chris
laughed.
It was
the best sound Vin had heard in a long time.
"Reckon I'm
doin'
everythin' I can do t'pull ya out o'this."
"I
know, and I appreciate it."
Chris
was coming to count on Vin's visits. They were one
of the very
few
bright spots of his lonely days here; just seeing
and talking
briefly
with his friend. Though they could not really see
each other
or
touch, just knowing he was there reassured him. No
matter what
happened, he knew he had a good friend on his
side.
They
talked about little things for the next quarter
hour, then Vin
had to
leave before the patrols found him. It was enough
to keep him
going
until the morning, and to push the
ever-encroaching despair
back.
Vin
carefully woke Ezra with the information he had,
enjoying the
man's
discomfort at rising early. Yet even in Standish's
morning
fog,
Vin was amazed at how quickly his friend
assimilated the
information. Plans were made for two days hence.
Ezra
went to see Chris again, and this time he
questioned Chris
extensively on his actions, habits, and details.
He hatched a plan
to
bring all the elements together in one place, and
needed
Magistrate Travis present along with Captain
Darton.
Just to
be sure, he sent Vin to a specific location to
find out
information. When the trainer came back, more
pieces of the puzzle
were in
place. Now it was time for the reveal.
They
were all gathered in Brattenwrighter's formal
sitting room, most
glaring
at Chris Larabee, who sat in his borrowed ragged
clothes and
in
chains. On his left sat a nervous Vin Tanner,
though he didn't
show
it, while two large soldiers stood guard behind
the accused
man.
Ezra sat to his right.
Magistrate Travis was seated near, not precisely
next to that group,
with
Matthew Davis beside him.
On the
opposite side of the sitting room, Brattenwrighter,
his wife,
Clarissa, and Pierce conferred amongst themselves
between shooting
looks
of hatred at Chris Larabee. Mrs. Brethsby kept her
back to
him,
talking in low tones with Clarissa.
The
chambermaid that found the body stood in the back
corner, well
away
from those considered her betters.
Captain
Darton held the middle ground with Sheriff Snyder,
both
watching the groups warily.
"We're
here, Mr. Standish. Could you please explain why
you are
imposing on my hospitality this way, not to
mention disturbing a
house
in mourning?" Brattenwrighter queried, wearing a
sneer on his
face
and the barest traces of civility in his tone.
"Sheriff Snyder was gracious enough to allow us to
meet, and he
stated
you preferred to be here, instead of in town,"
Ezra smoothly
replied. "I felt it was necessary to gather
everyone in one place to
clear
up some matters."
"Nothing will change the fact that Katherine died
violently at that
man's
hands!" Pierce yelled, his shaking finger pointed
at Chris.
"No one
disagrees she died violently," Standish answered.
"With your
permission, Sheriff, may I ask my questions?"
"Of
course."
"How
dare you agree to this, and make me submit,
Sheriff!"
Brattenwrighter roared. "This is my home, and we
are in mourning.
The
questions should come at the trial, not at this
delicate time."
"Mr.
Brattenwrighter, Mr. Standish has brought up some
points that
must be
explained. I cannot, in good conscience, put
someone on
trial
for murder if he did not commit it!" Sheriff
Snyder glared at
Katherine's father.
"I saw
him atop the body myself, Sheriff," Darton
smoothly
interjected. "It was his knife in her heart."
"True
enough, which was why I did not investigate
further. Mr.
Standish has. Go ahead, sir," Snyder replied.
"Outrageous," Brattenwrighter protested.
"But
necessary," Ezra argued. "Mr. Tanner, what did you
discover
about
the whereabouts of Mr. Brattenwrighter during the
time in
question?"
"He was
seen drinkin' and carousin' with his huntin' club
until five
thirty,
then the morning maids saw him go into his room.
His valet
found
him passed out beside Mrs. Brattenwrighter,
leaving him there."
"You
have the audacity to question my whereabouts?"
Brattenwrighter
shot to
his feet. "Get out!"
"I want
to hear this, Mr. Brattenwrighter," Matthew Davis
interjected. "If we are allowing a brutal murderer
to set up an
honorable man, then we must pursue all angles." He
stared hard at
the
father.
Brattenwrighter sat down.
"Continue, Mr. Standish."
"I also
can account for your whereabouts, Mr. Davis, and
those of Mr.
Pierce."
Davis
inclined his head.
"I
would not kill her," Pierce protested. "We were to
be married."
"Married for money," Ezra reminded softly. "An
arrangement that
suited
you and your family quite well and one you would
not want to
upset."
"That
is none of your business, sir," Pierce huffed.
"That
leaves me, Clarissa, Mr. Larabee, and Mrs.
Brethsby," Darton
said
clearly. "I see no reason for this to continue,
especially to
tarnish
the reputations of two good women."
"Mr.
Tanner?" Ezra turned to his friend. "I do believe
we need to
regress."
"Mrs.
Kingston killed her husband and the woman he was
with that
night,"
Vin informed the assembled parties, his eyes
locked on the
living
daughter.
Chris
could not help but stare at Clarissa. He'd thought
her cold,
but
that was quite an accusation.
"I beg
your pardon!" Clarissa shot to her feet. "I will
not stand
here
and listen to this any longer!" She stormed toward
the door.
Vin
blocked her path. "You were seen that night, Mrs.
Kingston. I
have
four slaves, all sold t'different plantations
since by the
plantation manager, who can attest t'watchin' ya
through the windows
with
the knife. They were told they would be sent t'the
cotton
fields
and families split up if they talked, not
t'mention the threat
o'bein'
outright killed."
"You
would believe the word of slaves over me?" She
pulled herself
to her
full height and her nose shot up in the air.
"And
their white plantation manager, who was with his
mistress when
word
filtered down ya were comin' t'the cabins.
Everyone watched,
but
they feared what would happen if ya found out they
knew. They
didn't
talk. Ya were their owner; ya kept the manager
that
threatened them on, 'till his family forced ya
out. They fired and
sold
everyone, and ended up with better owners, so no
one talked."
"That's
a pretty hefty accusation, Mr. Tanner. I will want
to talk
to
them," said Sheriff Snyder.
"I
checked it out, Sheriff. There's no question. The
slaves ain't
spoken
since 'fore they were sold, and the overseer's got
no reason
t'lie
now. He's been promoted t'plantation manager. Mrs.
Kingston
got
away with murder back then."
"I will
have you arrested for this!" Clarissa yelled.
"Mr.
Standish, Mr. Tanner, I must ask you to leave,"
Brattenwrighter
demanded.
"Oh,
but it's only getting interesting," Chris spoke
up. "You have
sheltered a murderer for years, yet you wish me to
hang immediately
for
something I did not do."
"I
insist, in the name of Governor Martin, that this
continue," Davis
said.
"Anyone wish to question my authority?" He dared
the family
to
oppose him.
No one
did. There were several uncomfortable looks, but
no words
were
spoken.
"Mr.
Standish, I will assume you believe Mrs. Kingston
murdered Miss
Brattenwrighter as well?" Captain Darton asked.
"Mrs.
Brethsby, did you inform Mr. Brattenwrighter that
you were
wanted
in England for fraud and theft?" Ezra ran a thumb
down the
side of
his cheek and chin, ignoring Darton's question.
"Under the
name of
Mrs. Grigsby, if that is yet really your real
name."
"What?"
Brattenwrighter stared at the governess for his
daughters. "Is this true, Mrs. Brethsby?"
"You
bastard!" the governess yelled, all previous
propriety forgotten
in her
surprise.
"You
have proof?" Sheriff Snyder asked.
Ezra
passed a parchment to the sheriff. "I am no
bastard, and you
are no
respectable governess."
The
lawman opened it and read. "This picture is an
incredible
likeness," he said. "Mrs. Brethsby, I will be
taking you into
custody. Captain Darton, might I impose to have
someone guard her
while
we are here?"
"Of
course." Darton signaled one of the men to leave
and return with
another
soldier, everyone silent until the soldiers
returned to their
guard
posts.
Vin
made himself small at Chris's side.
"Did
Mrs. Brethsby - Grigsby - kill my daughter, Mr.
Standish?"
Brattenwrighter asked, more agreeable to listening
to the
proceedings, dumbfounded by the recent revelation.
"I hardly know
what to
believe right now."
"Then
there was the tryst Mr. Larabee overheard, and
somewhat
interrupted, when he heard Mr. Pierce and Mrs.
Kingston involved with
each
other. Mr. Pierce was plotting to have Miss
Brattenwrighter
removed
from the scene to allow him to have Mrs.
Kingston."
"What?"
Darton exclaimed. "Clarissa?" He spun on a
polished heel to
face
her.
"I love
Peter, Father." She started to cry. "I always
have, yet you
married
me off. That was a failure, when all I wanted was
him. Now
that I
could have him, you refused."
"Because of the Scandal, Clarissa,"
Brattenwrighter explained. "And
because
I knew that your sister had already ruined herself
with
Pierce."
"You
compromised her?" Clarissa's eyes flashed, and she
advanced a
few
steps on Pierce. "While you slept with me?"
Darton
held her back.
"Why
not?" Pierce sneered coldly. "She was willing. We
were to be
married'; it was my right. Besides, it didn't stop
me from taking my
pleasure with you."
"But,
Clarissa, you and I -" Darton cut off. "I thought
– "
"I
chose to sleep with you because I was bored, Paul.
I have no
feelings for you." She shook herself free of his
grip, half throwing
herself
into a chair. One of Darton's soldiers stood guard
over her,
the
other returning to his post by Chris.
Vin
hunched his shoulders, using Larabee to block the
new soldiers'
view of
him.
"But
you already knew that, Captain," Ezra said softly.
"That was
how you
were able to stage the scene so well."
"What?"
The captain wheeled to face Ezra.
Mrs.
Brattenwrighter gasped.
"Oh,
you did not kill Katherine. Mrs. Kingston did. The
chambermaid
over
there saw her come out of Mr. Larabee's room
during the wee
hours
of the morning. She assumed that it was a liaison,
and said
nothing."
"Are
you accusing my daughter of killing her sister?"
Brattenwrighter asked.
Ezra
did not answer directly. "There was a witness to
the killing."
"Who?"
Several voices demanded the identity of the
witness with
impatience.
"A man
who helped himself to Miss Katherine's favors
before allowing
her
sister to stab the fatal blow," Standish
continued. "Isn't that
right,
Mr. Pierce?"
"What?"
The stunned man jumped out of his seat. "You said
you could
account
for my whereabouts."
"I can.
I did not say that accounting would fare well for
you. Two
grooms
coming up the path to the kitchen saw you and Mrs.
Kingston
bash
Mr. Larabee in the head when he was relieving
himself. They
watched
and followed you when you carried his unconscious
body into
the
house, through the servant's entrance.
Exceptionally curious,
they
snuck into the house themselves and watched the
pair of you
carry
Mr. Larabee into his room. At that point, Mrs.
Kingston snuck
out,
leaving you alone with Katherine. The grooms
stayed silent out
of fear
for their jobs, or being killed. If you were
willing to harm
an
honored guest of the house, what would you do to a
lowly pair of
grooms?"
"Explain to me, Mr. Standish, how you know
Katherine was in that
room,"
Snyder demanded.
"The
servants see everything, Sheriff. Everyone saw Mr.
Pierce, Mr.
Davis,
and Miss Brattenwrighter leave the ball to talk.
Four valets'
wives,
spying on the ball, admitted to Mr. Tanner that
they saw the
punch
Mr. Pierce give Miss Brattenwrighter had been
doctored by Mrs.
Kingston. Their consciences could not allow an
innocent man to hang,
but
feared for the loss of employment. They also saw
Mrs. Kingston
put
something in Mr. Larabee's punch when he retrieved
her fan."
Chris
glared at the woman, yet remained silent. There
needed to be
more
proof to clear him before he would be released.
"Spell
it out, Mr. Standish. I find myself growing
impatient," Davis
huffed
finding it difficult to follow so much intrigue
within one
family.
"It's
quite simple, really. Mr. Larabee was drugged, and
then when
he
drank quite steadily, he felt the need to clear
his head. He made
it down
the path to the stables, where he stepped off to
answer the
call of
nature. Mr. Pierce and Mrs. Kingston clubbed him.
Beforehand, Mr. Pierce took Katherine upstairs,
with Mrs. Brethsby's
help,
and placed her in Mr. Larabee's bed."
"Mrs.
Brethsby helped?" the sheriff asked.
"Yes.
How else could her staggering from the drugging be
explained,
and
covered in a layer of propriety? Her governess was
escorting her
to her
room. Only Mrs. Brethsby had been found out. Mr.
Pierce had
made
inquiries about her, and discovered her fugitive
status. My
guess
was that he threatened her into cooperation."
"He
did," Mrs. Brethsby confirmed. "Said he wouldn't
tell anyone
that I
wasn't who I claimed to be. Never thought he would
kill her."
Brattenwrighter covered his face with his hands.
Mrs.
Brattenwrighter fanned herself vigorously.
"Of
course, Mr. Pierce lingered down the hall. He
waited until you
left,
and then took advantage of Katherine. She
protested, evident
by the
torn clothing. They planned that once Mr. Larabee
arrived,
they
would place him on top of her, let the maid find
them in the
morning, and that would disgrace them both. That
way Mr. Pierce and
Mrs.
Kingston could easily remove Katherine from their
coming
together, even with the Scandal."
"How
does Captain Darton fit into this?" Sheriff Snyder
asked.
"That's where you've lost me."
"Their
plan took an unexpected turn. Captain Darton went
to speak
with
Mr. Larabee, and he found Miss Brattenwrighter in
his room.
From
what Captain Darton's valet told Mr. Tanner, he
was in there for
a
considerable time. The valet was waiting to find
out if his
services would be needed that night, or if he
could retire, hence his
staying
in the area. Out of discretion, he said nothing,
especially
when he
heard arguing between his employer and Miss
Brattenwrighter.
He also
saw Mr. Pierce and Mrs. Kingston come upstairs
toting the
very
unconscious, unresponsive Mr. Larabee, and he
heard quite a
fight
between all of them. His eyes watched them leave
the room, all
with
blood on them. Mrs. Kingston was shaking and kept
repeating she
killed
her sister."
"Are
these people available for questioning?" Snyder
asked.
"Yes."
Chris
spoke oh-so-softly, his tone holding both surprise
and
disdain, "Guess your guilty conscience got me
treatment, instead of
your
precious sense of honor and duty. I will not thank
you."
The
British military man looked away, swallowing hard.
"You were
treated
fairly once I discovered the situation."
"Once
your men worked me over so I couldn't talk. You're
a disgrace
to that
uniform." Larabee glared. "The fact I lived
complicated
things,
didn't it?"
"Tell
me what happened in that room," Brattenwrighter
demanded,
giving
all the participants his most dominating glare. "I
trusted
each of
you, and have been betrayed. Who killed
Katherine?"
Darton
cleared his throat. "I must confess to my part of
this
tragedy. The burden weighs heavily on my heart."
"Heavy
enough to beat Mr. Larabee senseless so he could
not protest
his
innocence or send word to others," Ezra remarked.
"Weighed
enough
to have Mrs. Kingston scratch him to look like
Katherine
fought.
Set the scene so well and so completely there
would be no
doubt
and the good sheriff would not even talk to Mr.
Larabee.""
Darton's head fell in shame. "For that I
apologize; the only
innocent was Mr. Larabee."
"You
fool!" Clarissa yelled. "Say nothing!"
"I must
speak. I entered the room and argued with
Katherine. She
told me
that she and Pierce were involved, and yet he was
intimate
with
Clarissa. I was enraged; I thought he was taking
advantage of
them
both. I confronted Pierce when he entered the room
with
Clarissa and Mr. Larabee."
"Shut
your mouth, Darton," Pierce snapped.
"I have
prided myself on being a loyal soldier, yet I was
party to a
crime.
For that, I claim my responsibility. Inside the
room,
Katherine was fighting the effects of the drug,
and blaming
Clarissa. When I disagreed with her, she told me
about Clarissa and
Pierce.
I was shocked. Moments later, Clarissa and Pierce
brought
in Mr.
Larabee, and I asked what was going on."
He
looked at Katherine's father. "They told me they
planned to ruin
Katherine in order to force you to reconsider the
marriage, Mr.
Brattenwrighter. She heard them, objected, and
tried to rise from
the
bed. Mr. Larabee was dropped on the floor, and his
knife fell
from
his pocket. Katherine grabbed for it, but Clarissa
reached it
first.
She swung it in a warning arc, but she was too
close to
Katherine. The blade went right into her heart."
Mrs.
Brattenwrighter sobbed quietly, leaning into her
husband.
Darton
continued, "By then, Katherine died, and we were
quarreling
over
what to do. Pierce asked me if I wished to see
Clarissa hang
for her
murder. I could not." His eyes fell to the tips of
his
boots.
"So I helped stage the scene so Mr. Larabee would
take the
blame.
You are right, Mr. Standish. I had Clarissa
scratch Mr.
Larabee. I knew that the chambermaid came early in
the morning to
change
the basin water, and stayed awake until she
screamed."
"Wonder
if this is how you treat all your guests," Chris
said to
Brattenwrighter.
"Mr.
Larabee, please accept my apologies for your
treatment,"
Brattenwrighter said stiffly. "I find I do not
even know my own
family,
and I have much to deal with. Sheriff, please
release him."
They
did, and Chris accepted Vin's help to stand. "I am
leaving, Mr.
Brattenwrighter, and I do not expect to be back
until the trial
against
the guilty parties here. Magistrate, might I
impose on you
to use
your carriage?"
"Of
course," Travis said. "I will remain here with
Sheriff Snyder to
sort
things out."
"As
will I," Matthew Davis added. "Mr. Larabee - Chris
- please
accept
my apologies as well; it seems that I only saw
what I was
supposed to see, and not the betrayal by those I
trusted."
"We all
make errors in judgment, Matthew, and I would like
to talk
further
with you at a later time." Chris intended to use
the apology
and
time wisely, further securing this man's trust and
backing. With
him
once falsely accused, Davis might reconsider any
rumors he heard
connecting Chris with Captain Vengeance, and at
least give Chris the
chance
to defend his name if that happened. "Will that be
acceptable?"
"I will
send word," Davis answered. "Fair journey to you."
"Thank
you." Chris leaned on Vin to reach the freshly
brought up
carriage. He climbed aboard painfully, settling
back in the soft,
cushioned seats.
"Mr.
Tanner," Travis called, stopping the man before he
got into the
carriage.
Chris
tensed, knowing how skittish Vin was around the
Magistrate.
"Yes?"
Tanner stood with one foot on the step inside, and
the other
on the
ground.
"Good
work." Travis beamed at him. "You too, Ezra."
"Thank
you."
"Thank
ya, sir."
"I do
have a question, Ezra. How did you convince all
those people
to talk
after so much time?" Travis gave his traveling
companion a
curious
look."
"It
appears I will be arranging employment and new
owners."
"You
didn't bribe them!" The Magistrate glared.
"Absolutely not," Ezra huffed. "I do have
principles, sirrah. We
discussed their having other options than their
current ones. I made
no
guarantees, but I believed that they would be able
to find
employment."
"Very
risky."
"I, for
one, though, am thankful," Chris said through the
window.
"At least I'm not going to be hung for murder." He
held out
a hand
and shook Ezra's. "Safe journey."
"Please
tell me you are not leaving me here," Ezra
pleaded.
"Ezra,
I need you here to give me all the information and
answer
questions. I suspect Mr. Tanner will not be
available."
"Sorry,
Ez." Vin slipped into the carriage and pulled the
door
shut.
"We're leaving." He tapped on the top of the
carriage, his
own
luggage already stored on it in case they had to
travel fast.
"Thanks, Ezra!" Chris called from inside.
The
carriage lumbered away.
"How ya
feelin'?" Vin asked.
"Like
hell," Chris replied. "See how many ruts we can
hit on the way
home."
"Same
old sourpuss Larabee. Gets cleared o'murder and
whines about
gettin'
bounced around in a carriage."
The
injured man chuckled, then winced. "I'm grateful
to you."
"T'me?
Fer what?"
"Making
sure I didn't stand alone. I can take the beating,
the
accusations, and even the trial, but it was easier
knowing I had a
friend
like you willing to stand by me all the way."
"Ez was
there, and so was the Magistrate."
"Yes,
but they did not sneak to my window each night to
check on me.
Or make
sure my belongings were taken care of, or get the
word out
that I
needed help. You did that for me. Thank you."
"Ya
gettin' soft on me?" Vin's rough tone showed the
emotion in his
voice,
belying the gruffness in his voice.
"Hell,
no. Just saying I appreciate having a friend."
"Who
said I was yer friend?" Vin held a straight face.
Chris
glared.
Tanner
burst out laughing; a few moments later, Chris
joined him.
Their
journey passed easily. In the next town, they
stopped at a
physician's office to have Chris checked out. Vin
followed the
instructions to the letter, much to Larabee's
disgust over having to
eat
herbal broths and medicinal stews. Throughout the
entire trip,
one
thing was for certain - they were friends, and
only grew closer
with
each passing mile.
Back at
his home, Chris decided he was lucky to have such
a man in
his
life, a good friend that would risk so much to
help him. Even
when he
wanted to shove him out the door for being such a
pain in the
butt.
Of course, good friends are like that, he mused.
They never
let you
face crisis by yourself, stood by you, but didn't
hesitate to
boot
you when you needed it. Or if you didn't, he
thought crossly,
when
Vin gleefully entered Chris's room to announce
Nathan was on his
way up,
and then snatched Larabee's pants to prevent him
from leaving.
THE END
Comments: Heidi