The Governor's Man by Jacquie Rogers (best beach reads TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซThe Governor's Man by Jacquie Rogers (best beach reads TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Jacquie Rogers
Read book online ยซThe Governor's Man by Jacquie Rogers (best beach reads TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Jacquie Rogers
And so it must have proved for Velvinna. โFoxglove. Enough of it to drop a horse. An overdose would certainly stop her heart.โ
โYes, sir, I agree.โ
โThat alone is not evidence of murder. She may have taken too much by accident. Still, itโs potential evidence. Anything else of note in here?โ They searched the room; there was little apart from two dresses and some ritual robes hanging from hooks, one of them a white full-length gown of a rough weave, with a matching hood. Quintus raised his eyebrows. Marcellus said slowly, โI believe that to be the robe of a wise-woman, one of the local Sisterhood of healers and sages. Velvinna had that status. No longer connected with the Druids of old,โ he added hastily.
Downstairs they found the dead womanโs library. It was quite a collection, mostly books on medicine, native plants and herbs. On a writing desk near a window was a pile of papyrus. Velvinna was apparently writing a herbal treatise of her own. Quintus took up some sheets and looked through the text, written in a careful spiky hand in lampblack ink.
โI did look myself, sir.โ
โWhatโs the book about?โ
โNative plants, and their properties for healing and poison, sir. Andโฆโ
โYes?โ
Marcellus looked away. โShe makes some mention about the old beliefs, sir. As I said, Velvinna was well-known hereabouts as a wise woman, a herbalist and healer. She trained other wise-women. She seemed also to have an interest in the White Ones, the old Druids.โ
โDid she now? Any dubious friends? Or enemies among the local tribes?โ
โVelvinna, sir?โ The young centurion sounded shocked. โOh no. Velvinna was loved and highly regarded in the city and the surrounding countryside. She was a wonderful healer, and often gave her services free to those in need. She was a renowned teacher, too. I believe she trained the Lady Julia Aureliana.โ
Quintus was moving around the room, searching carefully.
โCould you check the kitchen with Tiro?โ
โWhat are we looking for, sir?โ
โIโm not sure. I want to know more about Velvinna, her life and work. Who she knew, whoโs been here recently.โ Marcellus left, and Quintus heard hob-nailed boots clack along the narrow tiled hall and into a larger room at the back. Voices reached back to him, muffled.
He picked up a tiny bone cup on the desk. There were a few drops of liquid at the bottom, whitish with pale brown traces caking dry on the sides. He sniffed, holding the little cup closer to his face. Gingerโฆand something else underneath, masked by the pungent Eastern spice. Interesting. He ruthlessly plundered Velvinnaโs book, using torn-out sheets to carefully wrap up the cup. The foxglove leaves he poured out into a separate twist of paper.
In the spacious airy kitchen he found his two colleagues inspecting hanks of dried herbs hanging from the ceiling over the big scrubbed kitchen table. There were amphorae stacked around the white-washed walls, and stoppered bottles and jars arrayed on shelves. Labels written in the same spiky hand had been stuck to each container, but beyond a few simples like lavender oil, honey, and marigold ointment, Quintus was none the wiser. There was a small locked cabinet on one wall, too. Tiro got the key from Silvanus. The cupboard contained a single glass jar, sealed and labelled Digitalis. The smell of the contents told them this was nothing but the truth. It seemed that Velvinna was as she had appeared to be: a wise-woman, herbalist and teacher.
โMarcellus, can you call the steward back in, please?โ
The old man looked scared, but Quintus invited him to sit, saying, โDonโt be frightened, Silvanus. My job here is to find out what has happened to your mistress. You were fond of her, I think?โ
โOh yes, sir. We all loved her. So did everyone who knew our mistress.โ It had the simple ring of truth. Quintus probed further, asking about her friends, business acquaintances, any unexpected visitors in the past few days. One or two people had called to collect regular prescriptions; a pregnant neighbour popped in for raspberry leaf tea and a chat; a young visiting herbalist had borrowed a book and brought a gift of powdered ginger for the mistressโs cold. Nothing of obvious use there. The cook was summoned too. Had Velvinna been eating as normal, been given any gifts of food? None, said the cook firmly. In fact her mistress had been troubled with a cold for a few days and had lost her appetite, despite all the cookโs efforts to tempt her. In any event, like so many old ladies Velvinna ate like a sparrow, and much of her mostly plant-based diet was supplied from their own garden. The cook herself and the steward were both freed slaves who had been with their mistress since childhood. The cookโs assistant was her daughter. No strangers had called, no parcels of food or drugs had been received out of the ordinary. Her friends were for the most part herbalists and healers in the city, many of whom had attended Velvinnaโs school in their youth. No new visitors or anyone unknown to the staff had been to the house in months.
โThe mistress retired from formal teaching and all but occasional healing consultations a few years ago, saying she was getting tired and
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