Where the Summer Ends - By Karl Edward Wagner Page 0,77
ended against the rising stone. There were buildings crowded against the height, fronted upon the terrace a level above. In one of the windows, a light shone through the rain.
Her breath shook in ragged gasps and her legs were rubbery, but she forced herself to half run, half clamber up the rain-slick steps to the terrace above. Here again a level of brick paving and a balustrade to guard the edge. Boarded windows and desolate façades greeted her from a row of decrepit houses, shouldered together on the rise. The light had been to her right, out above the river.
She could see it clearly now. It beckoned from the last house on the terrace—a looming Victorian pile built over the bluff. A casement window, level with the far end of the terrace, opened out onto a neglected garden. She climbed over the low wall that separated the house from the terrace, and crouched outside the curtained window.
Inside, a comfortable-looking sitting room with old-fashioned appointments. An older woman was crocheting, while in a chair beside her a young woman, dressed in a maid’s costume, was reading aloud from a book. Across the corner room, another casement window looked out over the black water far below.
Had her fear and exhaustion been less consuming, she might have taken a less reckless course, might have paused to consider what effect her appearance would make. But she remembered a certain shuffling sound she had heard as she scrambled up onto the terrace, and the way the darkness had seemed to gather upon the top of the stairway when she glanced back a moment gone. With no thought but to escape the night, she tapped her knuckles sharply against the casement window.
At the tapping at the window, the older woman looked up from her work, the maid let the yellow-bound volume drop onto her white apron. They stared at the casement, not so much frightened as if uncertain of what they had heard. The curtain inside veiled her presence from them.
Please! she prayed, without voice to cry out. She tapped more insistently, pressing herself against the glass. They would see that she was only a girl, see her distress.
They were standing now, the older woman speaking too quickly for her to catch the words. The maid darted to the window, fumbled with its latch. Another second, and the casement swung open, and she tumbled into the room.
She knelt in a huddle on the floor, too exhausted to move any farther. Her body shook and water dripped from her bare flesh. She felt like some half-drowned kitten, plucked from the storm to shelter. Vaguely, she could hear their startled queries, the protective clash as the casement latch closed out the rain and the curtain swept across the night.
The maid had brought a coverlet and was furiously toweling her dry. Her attentions reminded her that she must offer some sort of account of herself—before her benefactors summoned the police, whose investigation would put a quick end to her freedom.
“I’m all right now,” she told them shakily. “Just let me get my breath back, get warm.”
“What’s your name, child?” the older woman inquired solicitously. “Camilla, bring some hot tea.”
She groped for a name to tell them. “Cassilda.” The maid’s name had put this in mind, and it was suited to her surroundings. “Cassilda Archer.” Dr Archer would indeed be interested in that appropriation.
“You poor child! How did you come here? Were you... attacked?” Her thoughts worked quickly. Satisfy their curiosity, but don’t make them suspicious. Justify your predicament, but don’t alarm them.
“I was hitchhiking.” She spoke in uncertain bursts. “A man picked me up. He took me to a deserted section near the river. He made me take off my clothes. He was going to... ” She didn’t need to feign her shudder.
“Here’s the tea, Mrs Castaigne. I’ve added a touch of brandy”
“Thank you, Camilla. Drink some of this, dear.”
She used the interruption to collect her thoughts. The two women were alone here, or else any others would have been summoned.
“When he started to pull down his trousers.. .1 hurt him. Then I jumped out and ran as hard as I could. I don’t think he came after me, but then I was wandering, lost in the rain. I couldn’t find anyone to help me. I didn’t have anything with me except my underwear. I think a tramp was following me. Then I saw your light and ran toward it.
“Please, don’t call the police!” She forestalled their obvious next