confront her with the terrible facts that Monk had found, and perhaps wring from her the truth about the night of the murder.
Without knowing why, Edith had agreed to distract Peverell and keep him from home, on whatever pretext came to her mind. Hester had told her only that she needed to see Damaris, and that it was delicate and likely to be painful, but that it concerned a truth they had to learn. Hester felt abominably guilty that she had not told Edith what it was, but knowledge would also bring the obligation to choose, and that was a burden she dared not place on Edith in case she chose the wrong way, and love for her sister outweighed pursuit of truth. And if the truth were as ugly as they feared, it would be easier for Edith afterwards if she had had no conscious hand in exposing it.
She repeated this over to herself as she sat in Damaris's elegant, luxurious sitting room waiting for her to come, and finding sparse comfort in it.
She looked around the room. It was typical of Damaris, the conventional and the outrageous side by side, the comfort of wealth and exquisite taste, the safety of the established order - and next to it the wildly rebellious, the excitement of indiscipline. Idealistic landscapes hung on one side of the room, on the other were reproductions of two of William Blake's wilder, more passionate drawings of the human figure. Religion, philosophy and daring voyages into new politics sat on the same bookshelf. Artifacts were romantic or blasphemous, expensive or tawdry, practical or useless, personal taste side by side with the desire to shock. It was the room of two totally different people, or one person seeking to have the best of opposing worlds, to make daring voyages of exploration and at the same time keep hold of comfort and the safety of the long known.
When Damaris came in she was dressed in a gown which was obviously new, but so old in style it harked back to lines of the French Empire. It was startling, but as soon as Hester got over the surprise of it, she realized it was also extremely becoming, the line so much more natural than all the current layers of stiff petticoats and hooped skirts. It was also certainly far more comfortable to wear. Although she thought Damaris almost certainly chose it for effect, not comfort.
"How nice to see you," Damaris said warmly. Her face was pale and there were shadows of sleeplessness around her eyes. "Edith said you wanted to speak to me about the case. I don't know what I can tell you. It's a disaster, isn't it." She flopped down on the sofa and without thinking tucked her feet up to be comfortable. She smiled at Hester rather wanly. "I'm afraid your Mr. Rathbone is out of his depth - he isn't clever enough to get Alexandra out of this." She pulled a face. "But from what I have seen, he doesn't even appear to be trying. Anyone could do all that he has so far. What's that matter, Hester? Doesn't he believe it is worth it?"
"Oh yes," Hester said quickly, stung for Rathbone as well as for the truth. She sat down opposite Damaris. "It isn't time yet - his turn comes next."
"But it will be too late. The jury have already made up their minds. Couldn't you see that in their faces? I did."
"No it isn't. There are facts to come out that will change everything, believe me."
"Are there?" Damaris screwed up her face dubiously. "I can't imagine that."
"Can't you?"
Damaris squinted at her. "You say that with extra meaning - as if you thought I could. I can't think of anything at all that would alter what the jury think now."
There was no alternative, no matter how Hester hated it, and she did hate it. She felt brutal, worse than that, treacherous.
"You were at the Furnivals' house the night of the murder," she began, although it was stating what they both knew and had never argued.
"I don't know anything," Damaris said with absolute candor. "For heaven's sake, if I did I would have said so before now."
"Would you? No matter how terrible it was?"
Damaris frowned. "Terrible? Alexandra pushed Thad-deus over the banister, then followed him down and picked up the halberd and drove it into his body as he lay unconscious at her feet! That's pretty terrible. What could be worse?"