He keeps writing, and my mood drops a notch. I’m about to try again, maybe ask if there’s a time we can discuss it, when he taps his pen into the holder and swivels in his chair.
“You have thoughts?” he says.
I perk up. “I do, sir. I would like to return to the first victim, Archie Evans.”
He frowns. “Evans?”
“We have not yet ascertained the purpose of the torture. What information was the killer trying to extract? It suggests Evans knew his killer.”
The frown deepens. “It does?”
“Yes.” Here I stumble, because I can’t tell Gray what I think the killer wanted and how that proves a personal connection. “I believe we should consider the very strong possibility that they knew one another.”
His gaze slips back to his notebook, and I feel the ground under my feet eroding.
“I suppose that is a possibility,” he says slowly. “Why don’t you think more on it, Catriona, and present your theory to Detective McCreadie at tea this afternoon.”
“This afternoon?”
“Yes.” Gray is already turning back to his work. “As much as I would like to pursue the case sooner, I have a paper due, and I have fallen behind. I hope to have time for an investigative update at tea. Tell my sister, please, in case she would care to join us.”
With that, he turns back to his work, and I am dismissed.
I start my dusting in the library, so I can pen a note to Isla, imploring her to allow me a half day off to pursue a lead. I also request a half hour ofher time, so I can get advice on how to proceed. I know what I want to do. I’m less certain how to do it in this era.
I include the note with her breakfast tray, which she prefers to be left outside her door after a knock. I don’t make it down the stairs before I hear, “Catriona?”
I hurry back up to find her in the hall. She waves me into her room.
Isla’s room is the size of Gray’s. Both are large enough, but neither is the sprawling bedchamber I expected from the size of this house. All the town house rooms are very much divided by purpose. You cook in the kitchen, eat in the dining room, sit and meet guests in the drawing room, study and read in the library, sleep in the bedroom. Both Gray and Isla have carved out a corner for more in their bedchambers—he has a desk for working and she has a chaise longue for reading. Gray’s desk seems shoehorned in, the space not quite big enough to hold it, as if he stubbornly insists on adding this extra purpose to what should be a mere bedchamber. Isla’s chaise longue fits much better. One thing they have in common? Their bedrooms both look as if a small tornado touched down.
I start to pick up a discarded dressing gown, but she shoos me away from it and into a chair. Then she proceeds to undress. I struggle not to laugh at that. Victorians have a reputation for prudery, and in some things, it’s well earned, but they have no problem with showing off far more cleavage than I would in the modern day, and they apparently have no problem disrobing, in front of a member of their own sex.
With the complicated clothing—and lack of zippers—this is still a time when people of Gray and Isla’s stature could expect a valet or lady’s maid to help them bathe and dress. Isla doesn’t seem to want that, but she strips down and reclothes herself as one accustomed to doing so in front of other women.
I notice her undergarments differ from mine. Instead of the layers of petticoats that Catriona wears, Isla has a lightweight cage-like contraption to achieve that same belled skirt. Probably lighter, but I think I’ll stick with the warmer petticoats myself.
I also notice something else. Her discarded drawers might also be crotchless, but they button between the legs. I stare in wonder at this marvel and decide that pockets are all well and fine, but I have a new Victorian fashion goal. Crotch buttons.
She glances over her shoulder. “I don’t suppose you know how to tighten a corset? I presume—dare I say hope—they’re gone by your time?”
I get to my feet. “Yep. Except for fun.”
“Fun?”
“Costume play and, er, intimate play.”
“Why would anyone want…?” She shakes her head. “Do not answer that.”
“Hey, they’re sexy,” I say. “And not actually as uncomfortable as I expected. From some of the books I read, they sounded like torture devices.”
“That’s because you aren’t lacing yours nearly as tight as Catriona did. I used to wonder how she moved in it, though I suspect it was less about decreasing her waist than increasing…”
“Her boob shelf?” I say, and that makes Isla laugh.
“Yes,” she says, “though I never got the impression she used that to woo the lads.”
“Nah,” I say. “For Catriona, it would have been pure distraction. You can get away with a lot when the guys are staring at your chest. I never realized how much until I suddenly had this.” I motion at my cleavage. “It is both a gift and a curse. I will endeavor to use my new power wisely.”