Cinderhouse nodded at the closed door and smiled again. It wasn’t the wrong house at all. He turned the key and heard a confident snick as the lock slid into place.
“No! You can’t do this!” And then louder: “Father! Father!”
He pulled the chair out from under the knob.
He picked up the spool of thread and grabbed the card of needles from the table and carried the chair over to the body on the floor. He sat down again, poked at the body with the toe of his boot. It was as dead as a person could get. He used his foot to roll the constable over. Rupert’s eyes were open, staring blankly at the ceiling.
Mustn’t have that.
Cinderhouse slipped off the chair onto his knees. There was no point in worrying about the blood. He was covered with it, head to feet; it was dripping from his chin whiskers. He broke off a length of bloody red thread with his teeth, wet the end of it with his lips, and poked it through the eye of a needle. He tied a knot in the thread’s hanging end, then bent over the body and stuck the needle through Rupert’s left eyelid. He pulled it through and around and hummed to himself as he began the work of quieting Rupert’s accusing eyes for good and all.
59
It’s not time to rest,” Kingsley said. “Push again.”
“I can’t,” Claire said. “I won’t. I’m tired.”
“Well, you may be tired, but nature hasn’t given you a choice. You’ll push or you’ll die.”
“Just take it out.”
“If I do, you’ll surely die.”
“Please stop saying that I’ll die.”
“I’m sorry. It’s my hope that I might motivate you to avoid death.”
“Well, you’re scaring me.”
“Yes.”
“No more.”
“Once more.”
“Only once?”
“I think once might be enough. I know you can do it. Just one more time.”
She didn’t answer. Instead, she leaned forward, her hands tight around the bedposts behind her, and she screamed and she bore down.
Kingsley held his breath as he saw the furry crown come into view. He did not consider childbirth to be a miracle. It was a natural animal occurrence, and he would prefer that a midwife be in attendance.
Where was Fiona? He had heard a racket downstairs and assumed that the clumsy constable — what was his name? — was tripping over himself in an effort to collect basins and heat water at the fireplace. He hoped the boy hadn’t burned himself.
The baby emerged amid a slurry of fluid and Kingsley caught it, felt her body pushing it toward him. He snipped the cord and expertly tied off the end. He turned with the infant girl in his hands, but there was no towel ready, no basin of fresh water, nobody to help.
Fiona should have stopped in by now to check on Claire.
Claire slumped, exhausted, back against the bed, and Kingsley used a face flannel from the washbasin on the table to wipe the baby down as well as he could and warm her, and she made the same tentative movements that he had seen from dozens of healthy newborns. She gurgled and tested her new voice, and he came around the side of the bed and rested her in her mother’s arms. Claire managed a weak smile and touched the baby’s face with her fingertip.
Kingsley went to the bedroom door and opened it, poked his head out hoping to see Fiona, but the hall was dark and empty. He went to the top of the stairs and heard the doorbell ring below him just as Claire called out to him from the bedroom.
“Doctor! I think something’s wrong.”
60
J