I ended up spending the night in a guest room upstairs at the club, not due to any excessive wear of drink, but because I didn't feel safe going home and couldn't yet decide where else to go next. Being obsessed one might say with privacy and security, I owned several other buildings scattered around the city to be used as a safe houses during an emergency. This sort of fit the definition, but I couldn't decided which one to use. Each had certain advantages and disadvantages, and I didn't want to hole up like a cornered rat without at least one of my pistols!
Upon leaving, I discovered that Sir Adrian had covered all of my expenses for my overnight stay and he had also left for me with the Club Manager a rather stout package. The parcel was all wrapped up in sturdy brown butcher paper and then extremely securely tied on all sides with the twine sealed with red wax, ensuring that the package had not been opened since wrapping. I nodded with approval as I accepted the sealed package. It's nice to see someone else taking basic security measures.
The package contents consisted of three sets of folders. The pair of thinner document folders contained all of the information the vigiles possessed about each of the sister's murders, which wasn't much. The official report on Danelle's accident from yesterday was the slimmest, containing only several pieces of paper. The lengthiest document was the complete and entirely factual report on the incident by the local Silver Avenue evening watchman Wergan. His report made particular note of my interest in this incident and he commented upon my apparent obvious shock and uncharacteristic dismay at her death.
Why did everyone seem to believe that I was a soulless reptile with no more human decency than a common swamp thrasher? On second thought, the question wasn't worth asking... I might get more answers that I wouldn't like. Sure I don't like people. Most people; nearly
all
people in fact, and I enjoy cheating, robbing them and corrupting women into mindless and obedient pets without hesitation or regret. I admit it, but I didn't realize that I wore this attitude of genuine disdain like a public mask upon my face for everyone to see.
Sure, I'm an asshole and mostly unapologetic about it. I'm rich and getting richer almost every day and I'll find some way to enjoy it all - every ha'penny and clipped silver mark of it. Most importantly I have my gift, and what else is there that's worth using it for other than to corrupt, beguile and seduce? Justice alone certainly isn't! There's no profit to be had in that! Whatever justice
really
is... other than just a more civilized handling of revenge. Now on the other hand, just like Sir Adrian said, revenge
is
a concept that I can understand and allow to motive me!
The second investigation folder held a few more documents and seemed to be reasonably comprehensive concerning the first reported disappearance of Rochelle, considering the Blackguards took immediate control over the investigation almost from the very moment her body was discovered in the river. Fortunately, the local vigiles had done a complete missing persons search for the young woman within a few hours of her reported disappearance several days earlier.
The facts of that case were still rather speculative, but significant enough to be slightly suggestive when read under the proper context.
*************************
By all witness accounts, Rochelle was happy about her forthcoming wedding with the dairy farmer Svein and they were both looking forward to their consortment together. On nearly every Sunday morning Rochelle had the custom of making the two hour trip to visit his dairy farm, which was about a league and half in distance along the eastern river road outside of the city. She usually then stayed for several hours but always leaft by mid-afternoon so that she could return to the family home and clothing business off of Glitter Alley in time to help prepare dinner, and she was always home before darkness. There was bad weather on the day of her disappearance and she almost decided not to make the usual visit and to stay home and work on an embroidery project instead, but at length she did decide to go as was customary. When she left home the rain at this time in the morning was not yet overly heavy and the southern river road was well-laid with stone and tended to drain well in all but the worst of storms.
When it was time for her return home from the dairy farm, the rainfall became harder and increasingly severe. Svein encouraged her to remain at his farm overnight but the young lady declined, wishing that no rumors of any immoral behavior be muttered about them before their nuptials. This fear was probably without merit as the couple were both highly regarded by their neighbors. Seeing that his intended had made up her mind firmly to return home despite the weather, her fiancΓ©e provided her with a heavy dark brown oilskin coat with a hood and wraps for her feet so that she could remain as dry as possible and thus equipped, she started her journey home.
It is from this stage that the next events become less certain, except that the rain storm which had been merely moderate quickly became a deluge, enough that visibility along the roadway could be measured in just a few yards by all local accounts.
In his initial report concerning her disappearance, one local resident reported seeing a young lady wrapped up a brown oilskin cloak quite near the Ormsbridge, which crossed the Orm River about halfway home in distance from Svein's farm at the great bend in the river just as it turns south. Another traveler staying at the Weirhold Inn, just on the north side of the Ormsbridge suggested that he
might
have seen a pretty but damp young lady come in from the driving rainstorm to take a short respite, but he did not remember her wearing the great brown oilskin coat and hood, thus could not be certain that this was the same young lady that inquiries were being made about. For their part, the host and staff of the inn, all members of the Weir family, recalled no young lady visiting at all, even briefly that evening, but admitted that while dealing with certain leaks in their thatched roof that they were all considerably busy during that point in the rainstorm and a visitor
could
have briefly arrived and then departed, seeing no one and thus thinking that the inn was closed.
No further sightings were made of Rochelle, despite lengthy searches along both banks of the river, until her body (or at least her upper torso) was found four days later some miles downstream. A local vigiles patrolman happened to be nearby patrolling the road when the body was discovered by a pair of local fishermen and he (the local vigiles watchman by the name of Auguste) was the one to pull the body upon the shore and he made the initial preliminary investigation of her death. Within an hour the Blackguards had been notified and took control of the corpse, and the investigation halted at this point. Auguste was unlettered, unable to read or write, but he later the following day dictated an 'unofficial' report of the incident, of what he had seen and done, to the local vigiles HQ clerk, to which he applied his 'X' mark, attested to by two witnesses. A smart young man whom I was sure that Sir Adrian would mark for future promotion.
The report was terse but factually, appropriate to the observations of a young man of no education or particular training, but possessing of keen skills of observation and a strong sense of proper duty, and his account was useful to me in several ways. The first was that the patrolman had several years of continued experience along the river road and was familiar with the appearance of 'normal' downing victims, and he strongly disputed the suggestion that her death was such an accidental event. Her body had been found quite cut in half (her bottom waist and legs were never recovered) and distinct marks on the flesh at the bottom of the torn torso suggested strongly to him that this damage had been done by the wheels of a wagon or cart. Auguste had seen a body with similar such wheel markings on the torso before, a lad who had been run over (quite genuinely accidentally) by a wagon. Thus he was certain, absolutely that Rochelle had died from a similar mishap, and had definitely not lost her way in the storm and fallen into the river to drown, as the responding Blackguard officers suggested. There was also a great many bruises noted upon her arms, throat and chest that the patroller felt had occurred before the time of her death, which the investigating Blackguards had instead attributed to post-mortem injuries that had occurred while in the river. The vigiles patrolman had examined the throat injuries carefully but had determined that this bruise was not deep or significant enough to have caused her death, such as by strangulation first, but perhaps she had been choked to some lesser degree prior to being run over, and thusly killed.
The second peculiar fact of Auguste's statement was an addendum, a rather plain memo for the record attached several weeks later, describing how a pair of local young lovers discovered a cache of torn clothing in a copse of trees near the Weirhold Inn. The items were mostly undergarments, some torn and ripped hose, a petticoat and linen shift that each had been cut away with something sharp like a knife, and some ripped smallclothes with what appeared to be smeared blood upon them, but not of any sufficient quantity for the bleeding to have been life threatening.