was tidying the little space around him and making ready for her.
"How are you?" he said the moment she came through the door.
"I'm very well," she answered cheerfully. He must never know about Cleo if there was any way it could be prevented.
She could not warn Michael without explaining to him the reason, and that would place him in an impossible situation. He would then have either to benefit indirectly from the thefts, which he would find intolerable, or else have to testify against Cleo from his own knowledge. That would also be unbearable, for the old man's sake as well as his own. Such disillusion and sense of betrayal might be more than his old and frail body could take. And then Michael's guilt would be crippling.
"I'm very well indeed," she said firmly. "How are you? I hope you are well enough to share a cup of tea with me? I brought some you might like to try, and a few biscuits." She smiled back at him. "Of course, it was all an excuse so you will tell me more stories of your life at sea and the places you have been to. You were going to describe the Indies for me. You said how brilliant the water was, like a cascade of jewels, and that you had seen fishes that could fly."
"Oh, bless you, girl, I have an' all," he agreed with a smile.
"An' more than that, too. You put the kettle on an' I'll tell you all you want to know."
"Of course." She walked across the room and pulled the biscuits and tea out of the bag they were in, filled the kettle from the jug and set it on the stove, then, with her back to him, took out the cordial bottle and placed it on the shelf, half behind a blue bag of sugar. Then she slipped the morphine out of her other pocket and set it underneath the two thin papers that were left from Cleo's last visit.
"Was it very hot in the Indies?" she asked.
"You wouldn't believe it, girl," he replied. "Felt as if the sea itself were on the boil, all simmerin' an' steamin'. The air were so thick it clogged up in your throat, like you could drink it."
"I think you could drink it here, too, when it gets cold, enough!" she said with a laugh.
"Aye! An' I bin north, too!" he said enthusiastically. "Great walls of ice rising out o' the sea. You never seen anything like it, girl. Beautiful an' terrible, they was. An' they'd freeze your breath like a white fog in front of you."
She turned and smiled at him, then began to make the tea. "Mrs. Anderson had to go away for a little while. Someone in her family ill, I think." She scalded the pot, tipped out the water, then put the fresh leaves in and poured the rest of the water from the kettle. "She asked me to come and see you. I think she knew I'd like that. I hope it's all right with you."
He relaxed, looking at her with undisguised pleasure. "Sure it's all right. Then you can tell me some o' the places you've bin. About them Turks an' the like. Although I'll miss Cleo. Good woman, she is. Nothin' ever too much trouble. An' I seen her so tired she were fit to drop. I hope as her family appreciates her."
A lie was the only thing. "I'm sure they will," she said without a shadow in her voice. "And I'll get a message to her that you're fine."
"You do that, girl. An' tell her I was asking after her."
"I will." Suddenly she found it difficult to master herself. It was ridiculous to want to cry now! Nothing had changed. She sniffed hard and blew her nose, then set out the rest of the things for tea and opened the bag of biscuits. She had bought him the best she could find. They looked pretty on the plate. She was determined this should be a party.
She did not broach the subject with Monk until after they had eaten. They were sitting quietly watching the last of the light fade beyond the windows and wondering if it was time to light the gas or if it would be pleasanter just to allow the dusk to fill the room.
Naturally, she had no intention whatever of even mentioning John Robb, let alone telling Monk that she was taking over his care from Cleo. Apart from