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Charles Todd - A Lonely Death: An Inspector Ian Rutledge Mystery

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Charles Todd A Lonely Death: An Inspector Ian Rutledge Mystery
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A Lonely Death

Charles Todd

Dedication California has a wonderful list of independent mystery book - photo 1

Dedication

California has a wonderful list of independent mystery book storeswe salute them all in dedicating A Lonely Death to Ed Kaufman and the staff of M is for Mystery in San Mateo. With great affection, we recognize a lifetime of loving the mystery and a second career as a bookseller supporting ita man with a great sense of humor and infinite knowledge.

And because they shared Rutledge almost from the beginning, we say farewell to two faithful companions....

Going on fifteen is old for a Golden, but Lindas Simba, a rescue, was loved by all who met him, and he returned that love with a deep and extraordinary devotion. We said good-bye on May 29, 2010. Letting go is the last great gift of love. Simba filled such a chasm of emptiness when we lost Biedermann and Cassandra that we knew he was meant for us. That joyous smile and a heart wide enough to encompass cats and dogs and people were his hallmarks. We shall not look upon his like again.

Going on fifteen isnt old for a cat. Fluff, another rescue, ten pounds of elegant long gold and white Persian fur, was a diva who offered love on her own dear terms. A North Carolinian by birth, she spent the second half of her life in Delaware, but never forgot her roots. She brought such happiness with her, and was content to sit by the computer as I worked. She put up a gallant fight against the cancer that slowly took her from us, and died on her own terms, surrounded by her family, on June 30. To Martha and Marla, who gave her into our keeping, our eternal gratitude. It wasnt easy parting with her, but they knew she would be safe with us. In return, she brightened our lives in so many small ways that we were hers from the start. Bless her for all she was and all she gave.

Sleep well, dear ones.

Contents

Northern France, Early June 1920

T he sod had grown over the graves, turning the torn earth a soft green, and the rows of white crosses gleamed brightly in the morning sun. Except for the fact that a fallen soldier lay beneath each wooden marker, it was pretty there under the blue bowl of the French sky, peaceful finally after four tumultuous years of war. Even the birds had come back, picking at the grass for seeds, insects, and worms.

The man watched them, those birds, and was reminded of a line from Hamlet, that somehow had caught a schoolboys imagination and then lingered in a corner of his adult mindthat a worm may feed on a king. Had these fed on lesser dead?

Many had been hastily buried where they fell, others in mass graves. Sorting the dead for proper burial had been gruesome at best. Many had never been identified. Walking down the rows now, looking at names, remembering burial details, broken bodies, bits of them, endless lines of them, he wondered if he was changed by them.

No, on the whole, he thought not. The war had been a part of the fabric of his life, and he had endured it, survived it, and was still steadfast in his purpose.

He stopped, his gaze sweeping the crosses. It was the living who concerned him now. A few had escaped him, but there were still eight left. And he was ready.

Were they?

Not that the state of their souls troubled him overmuch.

He turned his back on the cemetery, striding toward the Paris taxi that had brought him out here. And as he did, the slanting June sun warmed his shoulders.

Listening to the sound of his footfalls, he realized that he hadnt bargained for the silence here. He wondered if those lying beneath the crosses savored it after the noise of battle. Or was it unnerving?

There was a train to Calais tonight. Another from Dover to London. But he was in no hurry.

A good dinner first, if he could find one, a bottle of wine, and then a sound nights sleep.

As the taxi turned and drove back the way it had come, he leaned his head against the cracked leather of the seat and closed his eyes.

London, July 1920

C hief Inspector Cummins walked into Scotland Yard at half past nine, went directly to his office, and set about finishing packing his books. It was his last day, and he wanted no fanfare. An injury sustained in the line of duty had put an end to his career.

And not a day too soon, he said to Inspector Ian Rutledge who had stepped in to wish him well. I should have left at the end of the war. But I found one excuse after another to stay on. This case pending, that case passing through the courts. And here I still am, well past my time. He looked up, another stack of books in his hand. No regrets.

I feel responsible Rutledge began, but Cummins cut him short.

Nonsense. I knew what I was doing. I hadnt reckoned on the toll the years had taken, thats all. I wasnt quite fast enough. At fifty-five, one still believes one is thirty until he looks in his mirror as he shaves.

Will you be content in Scotland, after the bustle of London?

My God, yes. And if Im not, my wife will tell me that I am. Cummins reached for the roll of tape to seal that box and then turned to fill another. When do you intend to marry? Dont leave it too long. Ill be a grandfather, next month.

Rutledge laughed, as he was meant to do. Youve left behind a splendid record. Well be living up to it for decades to come.

Cummins set the books down on a corner of his cluttered desk and looked around the office. The shelves were nearly empty, the desk as well, and the photographs had been removed from the walls. He took a deep breath and said pensively, Yes, well. I enjoyed the hunt, you see. More than I should have done. All the same, there was one case I never solved. I was a little superstitious about it, if you want the truth. I kept the folder on my desk for years, telling myself Id get to the bottom of it, sooner or later. I even dreamed about it sometimes, when I was tired. What bothered me most was not knowing whether the dead man was a sacrifice or a victim. And if his murderer had ever killed again.

A sacrifice? It was an odd choice of words for a man like Cummins.

Cummins glanced sheepishly at Rutledge. It was what struck me as soon as I saw the man. That he was left there for a purpose. A warning, if you will. Or a sacrifice of some sort. Not religious, I dont mean that kind of thing... He broke off, then shrugged, as if to make light of what hed said. It was the setting. It made me fanciful, I dare say.

When was this?

Long before your time. It was Midsummers Eve, 1905. Cummins turned away and walked to the window, where sunlight had just broken through the morning clouds and was turning the wet pavements from a dull gray to bright pewter. Some fifteen people had come to Stonehenge dressed as Druids. Unbleached muslin, handmade sandals, staffs of peeled oak boughs. Mind you, I doubt they knew much about ancient druidism, but theyd come to watch the sun rise and chant nonsense, and feel somethingGod knows what. Anyway, they walked to the stones, sang and marched, drank a little homemade meadhoney laced with rum, we were told laterand waited for sunrise.

Cummins paused, staring not at the view outside his window but back into a past he reluctantly remembered, and Rutledge thought, Hes not going to finish it. It cuts too deep. Still, he waited quietly, ignoring the dull rumble of Hamishs voice in the back of his mind.

Finally Cummins went on, as if compelled. They were misguided, playing at something they didnt understand. But harmless enough, I suppose. At length the sun rose. One of the women told me later that it was magnificent. Her word. She said the dark sky turned to opal and rose, then purest gold. As they watched, the rim of the sun appeared on the eastern horizon. She said that what followed was unbelievablea shaft of light came spilling across the dark earth and touched her face. She said she could feel it. Just as the schoolmaster had told them. He was the one who talked them into this silliness. But even he was taken by surprise.

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