such a thing? People don't do it where they can be seen."
"You know," Rathbone said quietly, sitting opposite her and looking at her so intensely that in time she would have to raise her head and meet his eyes.
She smiled bitterly. "And who's going to believe me?"
"That wasn't my point," he said patiently. "If you could know, then it is possible others could also. Thaddeus himself was abused as a child."
She jerked her head up, her eyes full of pity and surprise.
"You didn't know?" He looked at her gently. "I thought not."
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "But if he was, how could he, of all people, abuse his own son?" Her incomprehension was full of confusion and pain. "Surely if - why? I don't understand."
"Neither do I," he answered frankly. "But then I have never walked that path myself. I had quite another reason for telling you, one of very much more urgent relevance." He stopped, not fully sure if she was listening to him.
"Have you?" she said dully.
"Yes. Can you imagine how he suffered? His lifelong shame, and the fear of being discovered? Even some dim sense of what he was committing upon his own child - and yet, the need was so overwhelming, so consuming it still drove him - "
"Stop it," she said furiously, jerking her head up. "I'm sorry! Of course I'm sorry! Do you think I enjoyed it?" Her voice was thick, choking with indescribable anguish. "I racked my brain for any other way. I begged him to stop, to send Cassian away to boarding school - anything at all to put him beyond reach. I offered him myself, for any practice he, wanted!" She stared at him with helpless fury. "I used to love him. Not passionately, but love just the same. He was the father of my children and I had covenanted to be loyal to him all my life. I don't think he ever loved me, not really, but he gave me all he was capable of."
She sank lower on the bench and dropped her head forward, covering her face with her hands. "Don't you think I see his body on that floor every time I lie in the dark? I dream about it - I've redone that deed in my nightmares, and woken up cold as ice, with the sweat standing out on my skin. I'm terrified God will judge me and condemn my soul forever."
She huddled a little lower into herself. "But I couldn 't let that happen to my child and do nothing - just let it go on. You don't know how he changed. The laughter went out of him - all the innocence. He became sly. He was afraid of me - of me! He didn't trust me anymore, and he started telling lies - stupid lies - and he became frightened all the time, and suspicious of people. And always there was the sort of . . . secret glee in him . . . a - a - guilty pleasure. And yet he cried at night - curled up like a baby, and crying in his sleep. I couldn't let it go on!"
Rathbone broke his own rules and reached out and took her thin shoulders in his hands and held her gently.
"Of course you couldn't! And you can't now! If the truth is not told, and this abuse is not stopped, then his grandfather - and the other man - will go on just as his father did, and it will all have been for nothing." Unconsciously his fingers tightened. "We think we know who the other man is, and believe me he will have the same chances as the general had: any day, any night, to go on exactly the same."
She began to weep softly, without sobbing, just the quiet tears of utter despair. He held her gently, leaning forward a little, his head close to hers. He could smell the faint odor of her hair, washed with prison soap, and feel the warmth of her skin.
"Thaddeus was abused as a child," he went on relentlessly, because it mattered. "His sister knew it. She saw it happen once, by his father - and she saw the reflection of the same emotion in the eyes again in Valentine Furnival. That was what drove her to distraction that evening. She will swear to it."
Alexandra said nothing, but he could feel her stiffen with surprise, and the weeping stopped. She was utterly still.