see her get out of bed to look at the cabinet?â
âI donât think we should talk about it. People can do these things. I tell you Iâve seen it. And quite clearly itâs what she did.â
âChantel,â I said, âI believe youâve saved me from somethingâ¦very unpleasant. Perhaps it might have been proved⦠Suppose I walked in my sleepâ¦â
âWhat nonsense. You donât walk in your sleep. You were half awake when you got out of bed. You were upset about her. I expect she had been particularly beastly that day. Listen to me, Anna. Youâve got to put the whole thing out of your mind. Youâve got to concentrate on pulling the business together. Youâve got to forget the past. Itâs the only way to go on.â
âOh Chantel, the best thing that has happened to me has been your coming here.â
âIâve enjoyed the job,â she said. âYouâll be all right. Youâd have stood up to them all if it had come to the court. I know you would. But you have to stop working yourself up about the whole thing. Itâs over. Finished. Youâve got to start living now. Something wonderful might be happening in a few weeksâ time.â
âTo me?â
âThatâs the wrong attitude. Wonderful things can happen to us all. Thatâs how Iâve lived my life. When Iâve had the most horrid cases Iâve said to myself: It wonât last. Soon itâll be over.â
âWhat should I do without you?â I asked.
âYou donât have toâ¦yet.â
She was right when she said that nothing remained static. She came to me one day and told me that Dr. Elgin had a post for her.
âYouâll never guess where. Castle Crediton.â
I felt stunned. First she was going to leave me and secondly she was going to the Castle.
âItâs good news,â she said. âI have to work for my living and just think we shanât be far apart. Iâll be able to see youâ¦frequently.â
âCastle Crediton,â I repeated. âIs someone ill there? Lady Crediton?â
âNo, the old ladyâs as strong as a horse. Itâs Mrs. Stretton Iâm going to nurse. The Captainâs wife.â
âOh,â I said faintly.
âYes, sheâs delicate. Our climate I expect. Some lung infection. It wouldnât surprise me if she is going into a decline. Thereâs a child, too. I couldnât resist the job when Dr. Elgin suggested it.â
âWhen do youâ¦start?â
âNext week.â She leaned over and taking my hand pressed it firmly. âIâll be near at hand. Weâll see each other often. And donât forget there are our journals. Have you written in yours recently?â
âI couldnât, Chantel.â
âYou must start at once. Iâll tell you all about Castle Crediton and the strange life of its inhabitants and you must tell me everything that happens here.â
âOh Chantel,â I cried, âwhat should I do without you?â
âTo repeat oneself is a sign of encroaching age, Iâve been told,â she said with a smile. âBut I must say I found such repetition endearing. Donât be morbid, Anna. Youâre not alone. Iâm your friend .â
I said: âEverything has changed so abruptly. I have to make plans. The business is rocky, Chantel. I shall have to see so many peopleâAunt Charlotteâs lawyer and the bank manager, among others.â
âItâll keep you busy. Write it all in your journal. Iâll do the same. Weâll make a pact, weâll tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And weâll both have the comfort of knowing we are not alone. We can live our own lives and that of the other.â Her green eyes were enormous. âYou must admit, Anna, that that is a very exciting state of affairs.â
âWe must never lose
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