fingers found Grace’s wrist. “Hello, Grace,” she said, her voice quiet and kind under the mutterings of the other patients. A shy smile swept Grace’s pale features.
“All’s I said was that my monthlies hurt like the devil,” Miss Holstein said, her napkin twisted tight in her hands. “And my stepfather takes me to a judge—”
“And a hundred years ago you’d have been burned at the stake,” Heedson said, cutting her off, as the cook brought out a fresh glass of wine and set it before him. “So shut your yap.”
“And if we could please not speak of such things at the table,” Mr. Baltingham added.
“Hardly a shocking thing that women menstruate, I suppose. We’re not fighting for our food or being kicked at the moment. I’m happy to talk about it,” Mr. Moore said.
Heedson continued. “If I may go on—I’m confident that the group of you here are intelligent enough to understand what I’m about this evening.”
He snapped his fingers and more of the kitchen staff appeared, bringing with them food that the patients had not seen or smelled in a long time. Green beans, potatoes, gravy, warm bread, and a tray of real butter were spread before them.
“I want you all to understand one thing first and foremost,” Heedson went on. “I’m not a bad man. I’m a man of limited capabilities in a bad situation. This hospital holds hundreds of patients, many beyond any hope of recuperation. Old methods of bleeding and starvation are not means of a cure, but rather methods of weakening the patients so as to make them more manageable for the staff.”
“Well, cheers to him who’s not the bad man, then,” Mrs. Ubry said, raising her water glass in a mock salute.
“This hospital is unmanageable,” Heedson said as if she hadn’t spoken. “Many of Boston’s unwanted end up here; the difficult, the slow, the savage, and the truly insane all sharing space, and myself given the task of keeping the peace.”
“Can we eat?” Miss Holstein asked.
“When I’m finished speaking.”
“He’s cutting us a deal, missy,” Mr. Moore said. “There’s something he wants from us. And once we agree to it, we get to eat what’s been put in front of our eyes, though our bellies will be yelling louder than his words here in a minute or two.”
“As I suspected,” Mrs. Clay said.
Heedson polished off his wine, leaning across Grace and toward Mrs. Clay. Grace shrank away from his shoulder and the fumes rolling from his mouth.
“What I need is simple. Mrs. Clay and the group of you here are the sanest I’ve got. You’re the cleanest. You speak tolerably well and you can be reasoned with.”
“’Cept for Grace down there,” Mrs. Ubry chirped up. “She don’t speak none.”
Heedson turned to look at Grace, his elbow touching hers. She pulled it away quickly, skin crawling where it had touched his. The glassy tint of his eyes was too familiar, and she leaned back in her chair as he spoke, the sweetness of his wined breath choking her as he followed her movements.
“Ah, but our Grace here is such a sight. Don’t you think, gentlemen?”
Heedson rose somewhat unsteadily from his chair, running his hand up her arm as he moved behind her. “True, she doesn’t speak, but when the Board comes to inspect this place you’ll tell them what they want to hear, each of you with a sad story about your lives and how you’ve found refuge here. A new family, a home when you thought you’d lost anything of the sort.”
Grace’s hands were in her lap, pinching each other in their effort to keep still while Heedson ran his hand up her arm, to her neck, his thumb brushing over the burn Croomes had given her. Pausing. Touching it again, with the slightest bit of pressure this time.
“Grace won’t tell her story, but she hardly has to, does she? It’s right here in the wideness of her eyes, the innocence of her expression, and the bulge of her belly.” His hands cupped either side of her neck, and Grace’s breathing came in short gasps, even those tiny bits of air reeking of wine and his cologne.
“Dr. Heedson,” Mrs. Clay said. “I think you would do well to take your hands off the girl.”
“She inspires protection, doesn’t she?” Heedson leered toward Mrs. Clay, losing his balance slightly and bracing himself against the table with one hand. “The Board will take one look at her and say to themselves, ‘What’s the world to do with poor