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William Monk 08 - The Silent Cry

William Monk 08 - The Silent Cry

Titel: William Monk 08 - The Silent Cry
Autoren: Anne Perry
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was happening. His father had criticized him for using prostitutes, and the hypocrisy of it infuriated him, but for his mother’s sake he could not be open about it. He flung out of the house and went to St. Giles. By chance, so did his father.”
    She took a breath and her voice became huskier.
    “The three of them set on him in Water Lane,” she went on, and although it was hearsay, Goode did not interrupt her. His extraordinary face was creased with horror. “They knockedhim down and raped him,” she continued, “as they had done the women—and perhaps other young men. We may never know. Then as he struggled and cried out, one of them stopped, realizing who he was.… It was Leighton Duff, who had just raped and beaten his own son.” Her voice was hoarse. “He attempted to defend him from further beating, but his companions had gone too far to retreat. If they let him live, he would stand to accuse them. It was they who killed Leighton Duff—and who believed they had killed Rhys.”
    Eglantyne Wade sat helplessly. Fidelis held Sylvestra and rocked her back and forth, oblivious of the crowd whose pity welled around them.
    “How can you possibly know this, Miss Latterly?” Rathbone asked.
    “Because Rhys has regained his speech,” she answered. “He told me.”
    “And did he know the names of his other assailants?”
    “Yes … it was Joel Kynaston, his old headmaster, and Corriden Wade, his physician. That was a partial reason why he could not even attempt to tell anyone what had happened to him. The other part was his total shame and humiliation.”
    Eglantyne’s head jerked up, her eyes wide, her skin ashen. She seemed to choke for breath. There was no outward change in Fidelis, as if in her heart she was not surprised.
    “Thank you, Miss Latterly.” Rathbone turned towards the judge, about to make a plea, and then stopped. The judge’s face was engraved with horror and pity so deep the sight of it shocked.
    Rathbone looked at the jurors and saw the same emotions mirrored in them, except for the four whose disbelief could not grasp such a thing. Rape happened to women, loose women who invited it. It did not happen to a man … any man! Men were inviolable … at least in the intimacy of their bodies. The horror and incomprehension left them stunned. They sat staring blindly, almost unaware of the room around them or of the strange, shifting silence in the gallery.
    Rathbone looked at Sylvestra Duff. She was so white shelooked barely alive. Eglantyne Wade sat with her head bowed forward, her face covered by her hands. Only Fidelis Kynaston moved. She still held Sylvestra, moving very slightly back and forth. She seemed to be saying something to her, bending close to her. Her expression was tender, as if in this last agony she would bear some of it for her, share both their burdens.
    “Have you anything further to add, Sir Oliver?” the judge said, breaking the silence.
    “No, my lord,” Rathbone answered. “If anyone has doubts, I will have further medical evidence obtained, but I would very much rather not subject Mr. Duff to any more pain or distress than he has already suffered. He has sworn a statement as to what happened in Water Lane the night of his father’s death. No doubt there will be further trials at which he will be required to testify, which will be ordeal enough, should he recover sufficiently both his health and his balance of mind. In the meantime, I am willing to rest on Miss Latterly’s word.”
    The judge turned to Ebenezer Goode.
    Goode rose to his feet, his face grave. “I am familiar with Miss Latterly’s nursing experience, my lord. If she will verify for the court upon what she bases her judgment, apart from Mr. Duff’s word, I will abide by that.”
    The judge turned to Hester.
    With a bare minimum of words, very quietly to a silent court, she described the bruising and the tearing she had seen, and likened it to other such injuries she had treated in the Crimea, and what the soldiers themselves had told her.
    She was thanked and excused. She returned to the body of the court feeling too numb with pity to be more than dimly aware of the press of people near her. She did not even move immediately when she felt a man close to her and an arm around her.
    “You did the right thing,” Monk said gently, holding her with surprising strength, as if he would support her weight. “You could not change the truth by concealing it.”
    “Some truths are better
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