with Mrs. Russell?â
âShe liked me at first. I was a lost child, in need of mothering, and she treated me like a daughter. I was fond of her, and it was comforting to have a home again. Iâd been so frightened when my parents died, and everything changed. They wouldnât let me stay in the London house where I felt safe and everything was familiar. They told me it was for the best to go to strangers.â
âThey?â
âMy fatherâs solicitors. Very officious old menâwell, I thought them old at the timeâwho kept telling me it was what my parents would have wished. But I was just as certain theyâd have wished nothing of the sort.â
âYou said earlier, âfor the most partâ?â
âAt first the three of us, Wyatt and Justin and I, did everything together. It helped me heal, I think, and I expected it would always be that way. But we grew up, as children tend to do, and Wyatt thought heâd fallen in love with me. Sadly, I wasnât in love with him. Aunt Elizabeth encouraged him. At least so I thought. I was too young at the time to realize that she might truly have liked to keep me in the family. I believed she was pushing us together for his sake, and Iâd have none of it. I wasnât a very pleasant child, I expect.â
âItâs logical, isnât it? She knew you well, you stood to inherit from your parents when you came of age, which meant you were Russellâs equal socially and financially, and you were already friends. I should think she was pleased to see Riverâs Edge in good hands for another generation. Her son could have made a worse choice.â
She took a deep breath. âIn fact, he did. The woman he married was hardly what any of us would have chosen as the future mistress here. She hated the marshes, for one thing. Justin told me that when Wyatt brought her down to see Riverâs Edge, she refused to spend the night. Even though her sister was with her. And she felt it was silly to keep a country house, servants and the like, when they could live in London.â
âThen why did Russell marry her?â
âI donât really know. Unless he didnât much care anymore. He wanted an heir, I expect. And she was enthralled with the idea of a military wedding, uniforms and raised swords and a husband going off to fight for King and Country. She told me that it was just too exciting for words. I told Wyatt he could have scoured England and not found anyone quite so selfish.â
âThat was rather unkind, donât you think?â
She shrugged. âI told him the truth. That his mother would have been appalled. That was the day before he was to be married, and I havenât seen him since.â
âThen why should you wish to buy Riverâs Edge?â
âBecause it stands empty. I canât bear that. I could live here. There are no ghosts here for me.â
But that wasnât what she had told the rector.
âWhat do you believe happened to Mrs. Russell?â
âI donât know. At the time I thought it was my fault, that Iâd disappointed her and she wanted to punish me. I was too young to understand that it probably had nothing to do with me, or Wyatt falling in love with me, or Justin being angry with him for spoiling everything for all three of us. I heard him tell Wyatt that he hated him. But of course he didnât. Not really. I remember telling someone that Iâd wished I had been a boy, and then none of this would have ever happened. â
âSomeone? Who did you confide in?â
âThatâs none of your business,â she snapped, as if already regretting sheâd given so much away.
âWas it by any chance someone from Furnham by the name of Ben Willet?â As he spoke, he was watching her eyes, and he thought that once again heâd found his mark.
But she shook her head. And evaded his question. âI didnât know
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