My mouth fell open, and I grabbed his sleeve. “When? When’s he coming? Why didn’t you tell me before?”
Jonas looked taken aback. “I didn’t think of it. I only heard thismorning. Mum said his secretary rang late last night, asking for a last-minute room. He’s arriving tomorrow, just staying the one night, apparently...”
My breath scraped in my throat. What did it mean? Could this be good news for me? They’dneedme back at Raven Hall now, to play the role of Nina, wouldn’t they? But an image of the hot-chocolate mug shimmered in my mind, and I felt paralyzed.
“It’s so little notice, for New Year’s Eve,” Jonas grumbled. “Mum could do without the hassle, really, but she doesn’t like to turn people away. I don’t know if he’s trying to make it a surprise visit, but Mum’ll ring and tell Leonora, like she did before—to give her a bit of time to prepare, you know...”
With a supreme effort, I found my voice again.
“Do you think your mum’s already rung her?”
Jonas frowned. “I’ve no idea. Mum went out first thing. And Leonora was skating with us all morning, wasn’t she? Mum could be ringing her right now, for all I know.”
“Please, Jonas.” I gripped his fingers in mine, this time. “Please,please, will you drive me back?”
“Why?” He stared at me with growing concern. “Beth? What is it?”
“I can’t—” I squeezed my eyes shut, thinking of that oily residue in the hot-chocolate mug, and Nina’s sickness. The word was back, hissing in my ears, pulsing through my body:poison, poison, poison.“I need to check on Nina. Please, Jonas. Take me back to Raven Hall.”
The B and B’s bike makes her journey so much quicker. Raven Hall soon comes into view, and she keeps her gaze fixed on it as she pedals: the welcoming gray stone frontage, the familiar chimneys, the proud turret. She feels bolder today, and she cycles down the center of the driveway with her back straight and her chin up—what’s the worst that can happen?
Instead of cutting across to the garden wall as on previous visits, she leaves her bike on the verge and strolls closer to the front of the house, pulled like a magnet to the drawing room window. Is this where the long-haired Kat will be sitting, weeping into her hands, comforted by her slow-moving mother? She can’t resist—she walks right up to the glass and peers in. If anyone challenges her, she’ll say she’s collecting money for charity.
The drawing room is unoccupied. But the familiar contents make her heart squeeze painfully. The black marble fireplace is still there, of course, but she’s surprised to see so much of her parents’ furniture, too, and her old piano. Was it all sold as one lot, together with the house? Nobody consulted her. Even her mother’s painting of Raven Hall still hangs above the old polished bureau. She grips the windowsill tighter and cranes her neck to see more.
“Oi! What do you think you’re doing?”
She whirls around. A tall man is striding up the grass from the dock. She opens her mouth to begin her charity-collecting excuse, but the words shrivel in her throat; she knows this man. Her stomach lurches, and she crashes back against the stone wall.
It’s the Backstabber. Daddy’s so-called friend; the man who stole Daddy’s job and got him sacked; the man she blames for Daddy’s death. It’s her father’s murderer.
“Well?” the man snaps. “What do you want? You’re trespassing.”
She struggles to accept the evidence in front of her: Can the Backstabber really be the new owner of Raven Hall? She didn’t think he had a daughter, but she must be wrong. Can he really be the husband of the slow-moving woman she saw on the veranda; the father of Markus’s ex-girlfriend, Kat?
“Are you just going to stand there?” he says. “Come on, clear off, or I’ll set the dog on you.”
It’s his hollow bluster—an image of that fluffy white dog trying to chase her down the driveway—that jolts her out of her terror.
“You don’t even recognize me, do you?” Her voice grows louder. “You forced my dad out of his job. You made him drink himself to death. And you stole our house. You took everything from me. And you’ve got the gall to sayI’mtrespassing?”
The man’s brow lowers. “Who the hell are you?”
Her voice slides up in pitch. “Isn’t it obvious? How many men have you done that to? You must be so proud of yourself, tearing families apart...” A sob overtakes her.
“My God,” he says. “You’re Charles’s daughter, aren’t you? Look, you clearly don’t have the right information, young lady—I tried to help your father, many, many times...”
“You destroyed him,” she snarls. “You killed him.”
The man narrows his eyes. “There’s no point in our having this conversation if you’re not going to listen to me. I can see you’re just as obstinateas your father, and I’ll tell you one thing for free. If your old man had agreed to let me buy this place when I first offered, he’d still be alive today.”
She gasps. “No.”
“I don’t even like this bloody house. My wife took a shine to it, and I knew it would solve your father’s financial problems, so I made him an offer. You could have moved somewhere smaller together; he could have got help with his drinking...”
“No,” she whispers.
“And he’d have cleared all his debts instantly, instead of descending into bankruptcy.” The man gives her a surprisingly sympathetic look. “It was your father’s obsession with keeping hold of this house that killed him; you must be able to see that. He should have put your welfare before his attachment to his bloody ancestral home—I told him that, but he wouldn’t listen...”