Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
William Monk 14 - The Shifting Tide

William Monk 14 - The Shifting Tide

Titel: William Monk 14 - The Shifting Tide
Autoren: Anne Perry
Vom Netzwerk:
sharply. “I’m busy. Your thief got off. Isn’t that enough for you?”
    Monk had to make an intense effort to control himself, even to keep his voice from shaking. He realized with amazement that part of him had respected Louvain, even liked him. It was that which made his rage so nearly uncontrollable now. This was the same man who had been dazed by the beauty of the great landscapes of the world, who had longed to sail beyond the horizon in the great clippers with their staggering beauty, a man he had almost confided in.
    “Did anyone tell you that your sister died?” he asked instead. He was not even certain what made him say it.
    Louvain’s face tightened. It hurt him, and he could not conceal it. “She was very ill,” he said softly.
    “Not Charity . . .” Monk saw Louvain’s eyes widen. In using her name he had at once told Louvain how much more he knew. He drove home the far deeper pain. “I meant Mercy. You knew Charity would die when you took her to Portpool Lane, and you didn’t care. Seven other women died as well, and we’d all have died if Hester and the others hadn’t been prepared to sacrifice their own lives to keep it in.”
    Louvain was staring at him, his eyes wide, his hands on the desktop white-knuckled. “You’re speaking as if it’s over?” he said hoarsely.
    “In Portpool Lane it is.”
    Louvain leaned back and let his breath out slowly. “Then it is over everywhere.” His body went limp. He almost smiled. “It’s finished!”
    Monk forced his next words through clenched jaws. “And what about the crew of the
Maude Idris
? McKeever died of it, and so did Hodge. How about the rest of them?” He watched Louvain intently.
    “If they haven’t got it now, they won’t,” he answered, and Monk saw barely a flicker of regret in his face.
    “Let’s go and see,” Monk suggested, straightening his body, his hands sweating, his breath uneven.
    “I’m busy,” Louvain answered. His eyes met Monk’s, and they stared at each other across the silent room. Monk thought of Mercy, of Margaret Ballinger, of Bessie and the other women whose names he did not know, but mostly of Hester and the hell it would have been for him without her.
    Louvain became aware of a change in the air between them. He sat back. The moment of understanding was gone. They were enemies again. “I’m busy,” he repeated, challenging Monk to act.
    Monk wanted to smile, but his face was stiff. “Come with me to see them now,” he said softly. “Or shall I tell Newbolt and Atkinson what kind of a ship they’re on? Do you think they will wait there then? Don’t you think they’ll hunt you down anywhere, everywhere, for the rest of your life?”
    Louvain’s skin blanched of every trace of color, leaving him gray-white. He drew in his breath to defy Monk, but knew that his face had betrayed him.
    This time Monk could laugh; it was a grating sound choked inside him. “You know what they are!” he said. “You know what they’ll do to you. Now are you coming, or do I tell them?”
    Louvain stood up very slowly. “What for? You’ll get nothing, Monk. You can’t prove I knew. I’ll say I paid off the others at Gravesend and these men brought the ship up to the Pool.”
    “If you like,” Monk replied. In that instant he knew exactly what he was going to do; the resolve inside him set like steel.
    Louvain sensed the change, and he also knew that he could not fight it. He straightened up and came around the desk. He was moving slowly, with the tense, animal grace of a man who knows his own physical power. “What if I say you attacked me?” he asked almost curiously, as if the answer did not really matter.
    “You won’t,” Monk replied. “Because by the time you show there is any truth in that you’ll be dead. I will have shot you—not to kill! In the stomach. And Newbolt and Atkinson will still be there. McKeever’s dead, by the way. Plague, I imagine.”
    Louvain stood still. “What do you want, Monk?”
    “I want you on the
Maude Idris
. Go ahead of me—now!”
    Slowly, both of them moving as if wading against the tide, they went out through the office. Clerks looked up but no one spoke. Louvain opened the outer door and winced as the icy air struck him, but Monk allowed him no time to collect a coat. There might have been a weapon in the pocket.
    They walked across the street and onto the quayside, Louvain shuddering with cold. It was a brilliant afternoon, the sun low in the west
Vom Netzwerk:

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher