Название: The Klondike Mysteries 4-Book Bundle
Автор: Vicki Delany
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Исторические детективы
Серия: A Klondike Mystery
isbn: 9781459723863
isbn:
Angus laughed. “You don’t smell milk, Mother. You pour it into your coffee and drink it.”
“Sometimes you have to stop and appreciate the moment.” Her tired eyes crinkled up at the edges, and the dark circles faded.
Mrs. Mann placed another sausage in the pan and sat at the table with her own coffee while it cooked.
“My red silk dress, the best one, with the lace skirt panel, was ruined last night,” Fiona said. “I’ll give it to you after breakfast. Perhaps you can cut it up and salvage some of the lace or the plumes.”
“I can repair,” Mrs. Mann said.
“Not this time, I’m afraid. It’s beyond saving.”
“What happened?” Angus’s fork chased down a liquid patch of egg yolk with a hunk of fried bread.
“A man fell down, far too enthusiastic on the dance floor. I tried to help him stand up, and he was bleeding from a bad crack on his forehead. Blood stains, you can’t wash them out, not once they’ve dried. And then he grabbed at me to steady himself and ripped the dress right down the front. It’s fit for nothing but rags.”
“Gee, that’s too bad.” Angus scraped the tines of his fork across his empty plate, trying to gather up every last bit of egg and grease. “That was great, Mrs. M. Any more?”
“No.” The landlady went back to the stove and tossed bacon into the pan.
“I’m sure Mrs. Mann and I won’t be able to manage to eat all of that bread.” Fiona nodded towards a tower beside the stove, awaiting its bath in bacon and sausage fat. The landlady always prepared extra for Angus, although she never admitted it.
“Thank you, Mrs. Mann, that smells like heaven.” Fiona picked up her fork. Mrs. Mann served them both and sat down. The frying pan popped and sizzled with grease and a new batch of bread.
“Hurry, woman,” Mr. Mann said. “Church time.”
She popped a slice of sausage into her mouth. “Plenty of time, dear. Plenty of time. But as you’ve finished already, perhaps you’ll fetch some water from the well.”
Mr. Mann grunted, but he picked up the bucket and went out.
Angus’s mother hid a smile behind a piece of toast and scraped her bacon onto his plate.
Chapter Nineteen
Mr. Mann doesn’t like me much, and he clearly doesn’t approve of me. But then I’ve run into a great many men in my life who don’t like or approve of me. As well as those who like me very much but absolutely don’t approve of me: they’re the worst sort. But the Manns like the money I bring in, and they appreciate the extras, like this morning’s milk, which I provide for us all. Mrs. Mann seems begrudgingly fond of me, as if she’d rather not be but can’t quite help herself, and they both care for Angus a great deal. Angus simply likes everyone. So we all live together in some degree of contentment.
No matter how long I tried to make it last, I finally reached the end of the pot of coffee. I could make more, of course. I’m not incompetent, although I have pretended to be so at times. But the remainder of the valuable milk, now resting in the cool, dark place under the floorboards Mrs. Mann used as her larder, would have to serve us tomorrow as well.
It looked as if it might turn out to be a lovely day. The sky was a brilliant blue, with the depth of colour of an enormous sapphire that once passed through my hands. (Very quickly, I might add, the stone being far too distinctive to hang onto for long.) You rarely see that colour in England, and since arriving in Canada I have become extremely fond of it. Today, there were no clouds, not even a wisp hovering behind the hills that hid the jagged rim of the distant mountains to the east.
“How would you like to go for a walk?” I asked my son. He smiled at me. My heart stopped beating for the briefest of moments as I considered what a handsome young man I had produced.
“That would be fun, Mother. We could head down the river. There’ll be plenty of ducks and geese around at this time of year. We might even be able to find some eggs, if it’s not too late. Ron says that the moose come out of the mountains to drink, and you can get real close to them. John O’Leary saw a bear, just the other day, not far from town. The mosquitoes are bad, though, so you should wear gloves and cover the back of your neck with a shawl or something. Mother?”
My admiration of my son turned to horror at the very thought of stepping foot into the bush. The moment we arrived in Dawson, and I shakily disembarked from the boat that had dumped us here onto, if not firm ground, at least mushy swamp, I swore I’d never leave civilization again. “I meant shall we go for a walk into town. See who’s about and listen to the gossip.”
“I’d rather not,” he said, “if you don’t mind.”
“Perhaps you can find one of your friends to go down to the river with you.”
He kissed me on the cheek. “Enjoy your walk, Mother.”
If I didn’t love my son so much, I would curse the fates for not giving me a daughter. A dainty girl to dress in pretty, frothy gowns and tie her fair hair in ringlets and ribbons and to parade through town to the admiration of all. I smiled at the thought, realizing that the daughter I dreamed of was the complete opposite of the girl I myself had been. When my parents were alive, and we lived on Bestford, the great Scottish estate, I’d run almost as wild as Angus did today. Until they corralled me for daily lessons in the big house, at any rate. I suppose what I would like most would be to have a daughter who didn’t have to fight her way through the world. Who didn’t have to live by her wits and the variety of skills she learned in the fen and the schoolroom and the streets. And in the bedroom.
Angus tripped over something in the hall. “Damn.”
“Angus!”
“Sorry, Mother.” I laughed, full of love of my son and rinsed my tin mug in the cold, slimy water in the bucket on the wooden plank that served as a sink.
I dressed carefully in my best walking dress. It had a sage green skirt of practical cotton teamed with a white blouse with leg-of-mutton sleeves and green ribbons. I pulled a wide black belt firmly around my waist, took a deep breath, tugged at the belt one more time, and put on my hat. An ostrich feather in a green somewhere between that of the skirt and that of the ribbon bobbed high above the whole contraption.
A bright sunny day, following upon a day or two without rain, had gone a long way towards drying up the streets. Ladies kept to the boardwalk and duckboards, but gentlemen dared to walk down the centre of the road, and horses and wagons managed to get through without too much of a struggle.
I made my way south on York Street towards the river, enjoying the warm caress of the sun on my face and the sound of the soft wind rustling through my ostrich feather. Many of the serious gamblers and dance hall girls leave town on a Sunday morning, taking boats downriver to the United States, where anything goes and there are no sternfaced, broad-brimmed-hatted Mounties to enforce the Lord’s Day Act. Thus for one day a week the town takes on a façade of boring respectability.
On Front Street, the 25-cent waffle-bakery was struggling back to life. The elder sister stood in the street, eyeing the newly hung sign, her scorched СКАЧАТЬ