Dead Cold Mysteries Box Set #3: Books 9-12 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (read with me .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Blake Banner
Read book online ยซDead Cold Mysteries Box Set #3: Books 9-12 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (read with me .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Blake Banner
โI say you are a wise man, Sensei. Lead on.โ
FIVE
We were approaching the hedge and wall that encircled the castle, on our way to the only road on the island, intending to follow it for the half mile down to the village and the pub, when we saw, about three or four hundred yards away, Bee, sitting on some of the wallโs fallen stones, looking out at the landscape. She was wearing a flimsy white summer dress and a large, white hat with a broad blue ribbon around it. She spotted us approaching and waved, and we made our way toward her. As we drew closer she waved again and called, โHalloo! Hallo, you two! What a glorious morning! Where have you been? I demand you tell me!โ
She beamed at us and Dehan laughed. โWe went to the stones. What are you doing out here?โ
She rolled her eyes and raised her hands in mock despair. โOh, I simply had to get out! I couldnโt take that woman for another moment!โ
I didnโt ask because I didnโt really want to know. Dehan did because she did. โWhich woman would that be, Bee?โ
โWell, there is only one.โ
โThere were two last night.โ
Bee raised a baleful eyebrow. โOh, you mean that appalling Sally. No, she is not a guest at the castle, not, at least, in the conventional sense. I refer to Pamela.โ
โYou two not pals, huh?โ
โMy dear, you have a gift for understatement. I despise the woman and she has the cheek to despise me back.โ
In spite of myself, I frowned and asked, โIsnโt that how it normally works?โ
โOh, my dear boy, how delightfully American of you. Give me a hand down, will you, Iโll walk you to the gate.โ
I handed her down from the rock she was sitting on and she took my arm. We began to walk and Bee smiled at Dehan. โYou chose well. My mother used to tell us, โOnly marry a man if you feel safe on his arm, otherwise heโll turn out to be queer or a sissy.โ Thatโs what they call โgayโ these days, and of course itโs all the rage. But when I was young, we wanted men to be men.โ
I smiled and changed the subject. โYou have a sister.โ
She smiled up at me. โHad. She died.โ
โIโm sorry.โ
โIt was many years ago. Ohโฆโ She paused and looked up at the sky, calculating. A warm breeze moved her dress and her hair in a sudden gust, and suddenly I could feel the storm in the air. โOh, it must be nearly forty years ago.โ We started walking again. โShe was engaged to Charles.โ
Dehan came around and took Beeโs other arm. โBee, do you mean that your sister was engaged to Charles Gordon Sr.?โ
โOh yes. Old Man Gordon was all for it, even though we werenโt clan, because theyโd be marrying into the aristocracy, albeit minor aristocracy. Would have been the cherry on the cake for him. The title is hereditary, you see. Weโve held it since we backed the Tudors against Richard. It would have given him a legitimacy he could not have dreamt of otherwise.โ
โSo what happened?โ
โMaggie, that was my sister, Lady Margaret Butterworth, went out to Boston during his last year at university. Then she came back and he followed after heโd graduated. She was terribly in love with him. He is, after all, a rather fascinating man, isnโt he?โ
Dehan smiled noncommittally. โShe was older than you.โ
โI was a mere slip of a girl back then. Barely twelve years old when they met. But even then I was aware of his intensity, the sheer power of the man. He was like his father, but more so. His father could never control him, you know.โ She sighed. โTo Charles it was only ever a marriage of convenience. But to poor Maggie, he was the love of her life. She was besotted.โ
We were approaching the end of the wall. Around the corner were the gate and the driveway. Dehan was frowning and there was almost a sense of urgency to her questions.
โSo when did he meet Pamela?โ
โWell!โ She said it as though it were self explanatory. โImagine! Accustomed to Boston and New York, moving to live on Gordonโs Soma, he was out of his mind with boredom. He spent some time in London, but his father wanted him by his side. He wanted to infuse him with the same insane passion that he felt for this godforsaken lump of rock.โ She sighed again. โBut Charles never felt it, and besides, he was a rebel at heart. I believe he would have done anything at all to defy his father. So he began to frequent the pub, where you are about to have lunch, and there he met Pam. She was the publicanโs daughter. She was very different back then, I can tell you!โ
We had reached the corner and Bee drew to a halt.
Dehan asked, โDifferent in what way?โ
Bee burst out laughing. โWell, for a start she was amusing! She was a very, very naughty girl! She and Charles used to get up to all sorts of outrageous things. She was a hoot! I was really quite fond of her back then. She was just that bit older than me but quite anarchic and, honestly, my recollection of her was that she was always laughing. Always had this mischievous, outrageous twinkle in her eye. And thenโฆโ She spread her hands. โThen Charles, foolish, foolish Charles went and ruined everything by falling in love with her.โ
I was intrigued in spite of my better judgment. โHow did that ruin everything if he was in love with her, and she was in love with him?โ
She looked
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