Author's note:
Due to the mystery/suspense plot, the individual parts of this novel are unlikely to make sense as stand-alone reads. Please see note at the beginning of Part 1 for more information.
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Chapter 18. THE DUMBWAITER
D amn it! Where was the hole?
Anders struggled to fasten his collar studs as he dressed for dinner with the Cornelissens. The bedchamber he had been provided was unsurprisingly outfitted with every luxury, including electricity; however, when he stood before the mirror, his body blocked the light from the ceiling fixture. He stepped aside to raise the wick of an oil lamp on a nearby table.
As the light brightened, it fully illuminated a painting affixed to the ornate, wood-paneled wall above. It was a portrait of a man in seventeenth century garments, his face haughty above a stiff, white neck ruff. With the man's reddish blonde hair and goatee, Anders wondered if he was an ancestor of Mrs. Cornelissen. On the wall next to the gold frame, he noticed a tiny porcelain knob resembling one that might be on a cabinet door. Curious as usual, he tugged on it.
The wood paneling swung open, painting and all. It was indeed a small, cabinet-sized door --- he now could see the cleverly concealed hinges. Inside the wall, he discovered a narrow, rectangular vertical space with two ropes disappearing into the darkness above and below. A dumbwaiter, of course. In the Fordyce mansion, Fulton and he had played with one when they were boys.
Anders was about to close the wood panel when he heard his name spoken by a muffled, nearby voice. His eyes swept the room behind him, then turned back to the dumbwaiter as the voice sounded again, emanating from within the dark shaft.
A moment later he identified the source: the dumbwaiter served two rooms. Directly across the shaft was a thin, rectangular rim of light from the incompletely closed door into the adjacent room --- which was Mrs. Cornelissen's sitting room, he recalled from his initial orientation to the second-floor hallway.
His first instinct to tactfully close the panel was delayed by his puzzlement over the next words, uttered in Mrs. Cornelissen's voice:
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"Did you not say that Mr. RΓΈkke was from Rochester?"
Dr. Schuller:
"I did indeed, madam."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"The very same city that dreadful woman, Susan B. Anthony, calls home."
Dr. Schuller:
"Of whom do you speak?"
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"Forgive me, I forget sometimes you are not from America. Miss Anthony is an infamous zealot for women's suffrage and 'equal rights' for women and Negroes. With such nonsense, she and her associates mean to destroy the institution of marriage. I am fearful that Mr. RΓΈkke will corrupt my niece with these fallacious theories."
Dr. Schuller:
(chuckling)
"Because he is from Rochester as well? My dear Mrs. Cornelissen, you are distressing yourself needlessly. Mr. RΓΈkke is entirely engrossed in his medical studies --- why, last night in the billiards room, the conversation was almost exclusively about politics, and the young man merely listened politely, expressing no passion whatsoever for the subject. Moreover, his conversations with your niece have been strictly professional. I hardly think he will wake her tonight to expound upon women's rights."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"But, even without this young man, these discreditable forces assail us from all sides. Suffragists! 'New women'! Heaven save her from these vulgarians! I was shocked last year when Ondine voiced her desire to attend medical school. Fortunately, Warren and I nipped that in the bud. Warren wants to do right by his brother's daughter, but the responsibility of seeing her properly situated --- of guarding against these unseemly influences --- has fallen entirely to me."
Dr. Schuller:
"You are the picture of patience, madam."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"I am at a loss to know how to reach her --- she scarcely speaks to me. Ever since she became our ward, she has been contrary --- earning low marks in finishing school, attempting to forgo her coming-out reception, then marrying Peter Van der Veen. I live in fear of what gaucherie she will commit next... what impropriety will be connected to the family. Indeed, I have recently heard most unsettling whispers of her having been seen riding her bicycle or walking alone in the park. But what can I do? I can hardly imprison the girl in the house."
Dr. Schuller:
"Walking or cycling in the park alone is unusual, certainly, but I doubt it would cause the scandal you fear."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"Perhaps in Vienna, respectable women may parade unattended in public parks without occasioning remark, but in America it is most unseemly for a young unmarried woman to do so, especially one of my niece's social position. I suppose it may pass unnoticed for a shopgirl or a nurse --- if we allow that such persons can be considered respectable."
Dr. Schuller:
"I defer to your judgment on that point, madam."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"Numerous times in recent weeks have I invited her to join us for more appropriate engagements such as shopping or social calls, but she always begs off, pronouncing herself too morose to be amiable company."
Dr. Schuller:
(murmur)
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"She needs to cease this indulgent moping. I do not fault her for adhering to the prescribed year of mourning --- certainly we do not wish to invite talk."
Dr. Schuller:
"Naturally."
Mrs. Cornelissen:
"But to continue beyond a year for a scurrilous man to whom she was wed fewer than three hours is excessive. Sometimes I wonder if she claims melancholia to escape her social obligations."
Dr. Schuller: