2nd Short Story in the collection Sailing with Mystery
A flurry of poison pen letters unsettle the passengers on the ship Nomadic.
Even Isabella is not immune from the vicious
invective.
Will the culprit be discovered before dangerous secrets are
revealed?
Opening / Links Below
Purple Poison
1
“What will your husband think of your flirtation with
Colonel Werthy?”
Isabella stared at that single line scrawled across the
cream-colored sheet of paper. Blinding sunlight flashed in her eyes. She blinked,
and the words in purple wavered on the page.
What will Madoc think?
Her husband would have nothing to think, nothing to suspect.
She wasn’t flirting with the colonel. They had explored Gibraltar Town
and Athens together. They dined together nightly, at Mr. Ingram’s table, the
only regulars beside Lady Peverell and Sheridan Ingram. Even Mr. Ingram’s
grandson Colfax appeared once in three days. Sometimes they did stroll the
Promenade or reserved deck chairs side-by-side.
That wasn’t a flirtation, merely friendship of two similar
minds. The colonel could talk art. She knew more than a little about world
politics, currently and historically. Their association was nothing more than
that.
A figure crossed before her, blocking the brilliant
Mediterranean sun before dropping into the chaise beside hers. “You’re
frowning, Mrs. Tarrant.”
The very man in question, Col. Werthy looked the gentleman
at leisure in a summer suit, straw boater, and diagonally striped Repp tie. She
waited until he had lit one of his ubiquitous cigarillos then handed over the
letter.
He scanned it before those glass-clear grey eyes met hers.
“I didn’t expect you to be the next target. My apologies.”
“The next target? Other people have received letters like
this?” Even as she asked, Isabella considered potential recipients. One of
those would not be Gemma Stropeford with her missing diary. She and her husband
had debarked in Gibraltar, deciding their better course would be a return to
England. Isabella had admitted to some relief as they left ship, aided by a
loan from Lady Peverell. She had not wanted to become either confidante or good
friend to Gemma.
Werthy waved the single sheet. “You join a privileged
circle. I know of three others. No doubt more clutch their poison pen letters
close, trying to hide them.”
“Poison pen?”
“What else would you call this? It’s a mild version compared
to others that I’ve seen, but it’s clearly designed to poison your emotions.”
“A mild version? Did you receive one?”
“Not I. I had opportunity to read one.”
“A single line like this?”
“Rather longer. Quite the diatribe.”
“Really?” She wanted to ask who else? and what was
in the letter?, but those questions seemed the height of rudeness.
He drew on the thin dark cigar, and she caught a whiff of
rich tobacco under the smoke. “Mrs. Tarrant, you didn’t ask the expected
question.”
“I didn’t? But we’re not involved in a flirtation, are we?”
Werthy chuckled. “You never fail to surprise me. Are you not
going to demand that I absent myself from your company?”
“I will not. This claim lacks proof.” She held out her hand,
and he returned the letter with its vicious implication.
“No worries about what your husband will think?”
“I am innocent of any flirtation. Besides, they would need
to know Madoc’s address in India. I doubt they do—unless they’ve invaded my
cabin and absconded with one of his letters. Nor do I think they will travel
all the way to Madras and personally inform him of my supposed perfidy.”
Laughter from three youths strolling past broke Isabella’s
attention on the letter. Her gaze traveled along the crowded Promenade deck.
Anyone could have written the letter.
No, not anyone. Only someone who knew she was married could
have penned it, someone who’d seen her growing friendship with Col. Werthy,
someone who wanted to poison that friendship.
Farther along the deck, in the chaises, she saw Mrs. Phoebe
Drake, dark head bent over a fashion magazine. A few chairs on, Miss Arabella
Swandon manipulated a hook in and out of a handwork project. The ecru string
reminded Isabella of a fisherman’s sweater. The Gallaghers and their daughter
stood at the ship rail, Mrs. Gallagher holding a wide-brimmed straw hat firmly
on her head, the ribbon around her daughter’s boater fluttering in the breeze.
A young woman with golden curls, shining in the Mediterranean sun, looked their
way. When her gaze encountered Isabella’s, she ducked her head and hid behind a
novel.
Isabella looked again at the scrawl of purple ink. The
handwriting was upright, the words open and well-spaced, the letters formed
loosely, the capital W’s and C tall and lean. It certainly didn’t look like the
hand of a poisonous person. Only Werthy’s name was stated, not hers, and she
was not the only woman to receive his attentions. The note had no date. At the
top was the ship’s seal, engraved in gold, stationery from a first-class salon.
Isabella refolded the letter and slipped it inside its
envelope, also with a gold seal. Here was her name, the M of Mrs. open with a
waved hook for its start, the I of Isabella a tall line hooked at the bottom,
the T with a hooked line at the top then straight down. The pen had torn a hole
in the envelope when the nib crossed the last T in Tarrant. Here was the
evidence of enmity and an angry heart.
“Tell me what you know, Colonel.”
“Now that sounds like a determined mind.”
A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. He held his
cigarillo over the chaise arm. The smoke wafted away from them. In that
silence, something—the lines around his eyes, a vagrant intonation
half-sensed—something caught her attention, and Isabella gave him a sharper
look.
Col. Werthy had the lean athletic grace that made her think
of a mountain lion seen at the zoo in Philadelphia. Attention to his attire
gave him a sharp mien echoed in his military bearing. He never set himself
forward, but he was a presence that couldn’t be overlooked. Sheridan Ingram had
disclosed that he saw Werthy in the ship’s gymnasium whenever he managed to
attend. He had the good graces of Lady Peverell, that redoubtable scion of
nobility, as well as Hyatt Ingram, wealthy financier. They both cut through
pretensions like a sharp blade through butter.
His smile dropped. “The artist’s eye,” he murmured. “That
risk I didn’t expect.”
Isabella felt a pang at that implied slight to her talent,
and her voice sharpened. “Because I paint pretty landscapes and avoid sketching
my fellow passengers?”
Rather than answer, he looked away, his gaze following
people strolling the deck or standing in conversation.
She spotted the dilettante Lionel Wexford talking to a young
man clad in a fisherman’s striped shirt. Farther along the railing a
mutton-chopped elderly gentleman stared at a gull diving around the one of the
ship’s four masts.
She broke the stretching silence. “Will this change things
between us? Will it change our friendship? Are we going to change over one line
in purple ink?”
Those clear grey eyes returned to her. He had his own
artist’s eye, piercing beyond the obvious, and she feared he saw just how much
she enjoyed their relationship. He smiled and infused warmth into his answer.
“No. No, Mrs. Tarrant, we aren’t.”
Yet she mistrusted that forced heartiness. Isabella tucked
the letter in her sketchbook then swivelled her legs off the chaise. “Walk with
me.”
The breeze ruffled her hair. The skirt of her blue polka-dot
dress fluttered around her ankles. If she could walk him away from everyone
else, where they wouldn’t be overheard, he might tell her about the other
recipients. If she knew about them, she might be able to find a common link.
The vivid blue sky was bright against the dark blue waters
surging around the ship. They passed a couple strolling the deck, arms linked
and heads bent to each other, a mother herding a daughter and son away from the
shuffle board game played by two teenaged boys, a man walking alone, and two
young women chatting and giggling.
As they neared the bow, Isabella veered toward the railing. Out
from under the upper deck and against the rail, the sun was brilliant and the
the wind stronger. Her skirts tangled around the railing, reaching for the sea.
Overhead the sky was a blue haze, but far to the east, storm clouds threatened
the waters that they sailed toward.
Werthy took off his boater and stared at the distant clouds.
The wind ruffled his dark, wavy hair. It tore his tie from his linen jacket,
and the striped ends streamed across his chest.
No one was within fifteen feet of them, and no one seemed to
watch them. Now was the time to ask the important questions. “Who else? Who
else has received a letter?”
Werthy gave a cutting gesture.
Isabella huffed. “You said three others were in this
privileged circle of recipients. Will you tell me who they are? Do you know how
long ago these letters started?”
He raised an eyebrow. “You think to investigate?”
“I think a minor evil unchecked will turn into a greater
evil. Did we not just fight a war with a minor cause that exploded into a major
issue?”
“A hit, a palpable hit,” he quoted Hamlet and touched
a finger to his brow. Those literary injections and his wide-ranging knowledge
of his world were two reasons she valued his company. “I have no first-hand
knowledge of those letters. Nor do I have permission to name the third.”
“You’ve piqued my curiosity, Colonel, but I will not censure
you for discretion. I did not come on this voyage to poke my nose into other
people’s business.”
His gaze swept the deck, tracking their walk past the
shuffle board game and back to the deck chairs. He eyed the closest person, a
lady swathed in a shawl, her attention was on the teenagers shouting over the
shuffleboard game. “Join me for luncheon,” he finally said. “You may find it
edifying.”
Luncheon was out. As much as Isabella wanted answers, she
wouldn’t disappoint a friend. “I regret that I have another invitation, but I
thank you.”
“Lady Peverell?”
“Not today, no.”
“Nedda Cortland?”
Now what did Col. Werthy know about Hyatt Ingram’s personal
secretary? “The very same,” she murmured. She would not tease the information
from him. He would either share it or not. She stepped away from the railing,
preparing to depart.
“Bring her with you. No doubt she will prefer a Gold Star
luncheon to a mere Silver Star. Or does she enjoy her half-hour snatched away
from her employer?”
“If she consents” was all that Isabella would commit to.
Purchase Links for the Short Story ~
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The Zon https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C59FJJWC
Buy the Collected Short Stories
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