11. Sharing
Mary wasn't going to leave until after Aiden woke and could leave as well. She came downstairs a little after eleven in the morning, expecting that the rest of the gathered company would be gone, except for Caroline. She was a bit surprised to hear voices coming from the drawing room.
"Honestly, I think I'm hopeless." Mary recognized Veronica as the speaker, even through the partially closed door. Mary entered, hoping she wasn't interrupting a private conversation. She found Veronica and Caroline sitting together on the sofa, and she was glad to see that last night's formal dress had been completely abandoned for comfortable slacks and casual cotton blouses. Veronica added a light sweater as well, but at least Mary didn't feel out of place in her jeans. "Good morning, Mary."
"Good morning, I hope I'm not interrupting." She walked a little further into the room. The furniture had been put back in place and Mary sat in one of the wing chairs. Someone had closed the sheer curtains to filter most of the noontime sun, but it left the room was bright and inviting.
"Of course not." Caroline assured her.
"You don't knit, do you?" Veronica asked, holding up the rough beginning of a scarf.
"No, I don't." Mary answered.
"Neither do I." She set it aside. "At least not with any skill."
"Well if you just started-" Mary said.
"I started fifteen years ago." Veronica said with a derisive snort. "Caroline's the one with the real talent, she just tolerates me." Caroline's wooden needles had been making soft rapid clicking sounds since Mary entered the room. She seemed to be paying little attention to what her hands were doing, and yet whatever she was making was rapidly growing row by perfect row.
"That must be your embroidery in the bag." Caroline stopped for a moment and handed it to her.
"Yes, I wondered why I couldn't find it upstairs." Mary accepted it and took out the piece she was working on.
"That's lovely!" Veronica moved closer to look at the large flower arrangement in a white basket.
"Thank you. I redecorated the breakfast room in that shade of yellow," Mary pointed out one of the sunny tones. "But I couldn't find any artwork I liked, so I thought I would make some."
"And here I sit, skill-less." Veronica sighed and picked up her knitting again and for a short time the room was silent.
"Veronica," Mary started. "Did you ever meet the twins?" Both sets of needles stopped clicking.
"You mean the Barnaby twins?" Veronica looked completely taken by surprise.
"I think their name was Barnaby. Matthew and Mark?"
"Yes, they were Barnabys, but how did you find out about them?" She stuck the needles into the ball of green yarn and dropped the lot into her bag.
"Aiden and I are staying in their suite-"
"Have you seen them?" Caroline asked, her eyes wide.
"It's only Matthew that still wanders around." Veronica corrected. "And he sticks to his room and the sitting room. I'm not sure why."
"I knew there was something strange about those rooms." Mary said. She set her stitching aside. "He had the room on the left?"
"You HAVE seen him!" Caroline moved forward in her seat.
"No, but I definitely heard something when I was looking more closely at the painting." Mary had moved to the edge of her chair. "And Aiden told me that that I was imagining things."
"Typical male, of any kind. If it doesn't fit into their narrow world it doesn't exist." Veronica said dismissively. "That painting has always given me chills though. You know where it was painted don't you?"
"No. I assume it was somewhere in this house though." Mary answered. "From what Robbie said this was the only place they lived."
"True enough, but they posed in Ambrose's library." The older woman said.
"I've seen pictures of Beeson Hall," Caroline said. "I don't remember the library looking like that."
"Not the one upstairs." Veronica explained. "The magic library at the Hall has been kept separately for, well, I assume since the difficulty. It was painted in the second library."
"Why there?" Mary was surprised, but now she recognized the painting in the background.
"I've no idea." Veronica said. "What I heard from Ambrose was that they insisted on it and even though they were never great friends of his he agreed for some reason. Knowing Ambrose as I did, it probably had something to do with what was written on the page in front of them."
"What was it?" Mary asked quickly.
"I don't know. I don't know if anyone knows how to read it anymore, except Aiden. You should ask him to translate it." Veronica sipped her tea and found it had gone cold.
"May I?" Mary held out her hands.
"I can just call for Rose." Veronica handed her the cup with a curious expression.
"This is quicker." Mary held the cup and after a very short time steam was rising from it again. She handed it back to Veronica. She and Caroline were both trying not to look too impressed.
"Thank you. You're going to have to teach me to do that." The older woman sipped the hot liquid.
"Anytime you like." Mary smiled. "Back to the painting though, someone painted over the symbol. Aiden could make out very little of it, and apparently what he was able to see might not be accurate because so much of it is gone."
"Who would have done a thing like that?" Caroline asked.
"My uncle." Everyone turned to look at Robbie. No one had heard him enter and Mary wondered how long he had been standing there. Mrs. Bennett stood in the open door. "Forgive me ladies, I was coming in to see if you were staying to lunch as usual, Veronica. I couldn't help but overhear your conversation." Robbie sat down with them.
"Of course I'm staying, things are just getting interesting." She sipped the hot tea. "Are you trying to tell us that Crawford altered the painting?"
"No, it was my mother's brother, Steven." Robbie nodded to the housekeeper and she disappeared.
"Oh, he was a strange sort." Veronica said. "Always kept to himself like it was a crime to be social. Everyone who knew him, even casually, was surprised when he married." She explained to the others.
"The last time they stayed here, he and his family stayed in the twin's rooms. When they left, we found the painting that way. My mother thought their son had done it, but he was only five at the time and it was very carefully done. Between my father and I we had the painting cleaned, restored, just about everything we could think of to get the image back to the way it was, but the way it is now is the sum total of our efforts." Robbie explained. "Since then no one's wanted to stay in there, they claim it's haunted."
"Lunch is served." Bennett said from the doorway.
"I thought we would be most comfortable in the conservatory." Robbie offered Veronica his arm and Caroline and Mary followed them. The sunlight from the large, uncovered windows sparkled off the simple white china and plain glassware, adding a magical glitter to the ordinary objects. Mary waited until everyone was seated, and the meal had been served before she asked the question that had been on tip of her tongue.
"So what did the page say?" She asked.
"The page?" Robbie looked at her blankly for a moment. "OH! The page in the painting. No one knows. I don't think the twins knew either."
"How could they not know? They were so insistent on the place and all the rest of it." Mary asked.
"From what I was told it was a dream they kept having. I'm not sure if Matthew or Mark started to draw the symbols first, but eventually they each added to it and when it was finished they started making arrangements with Ambrose and then commissioned the artist." He took a bite of the salad and was silent for a few minutes. "My father used to speculate that it was about your family, since they wanted it painted at the Hall."
"It is." Mary said. "That was the only part that Aiden could clearly make out." Mary knew that it didn't make a whole lot of sense to hold back the rest of Aiden's translation, but in that moment she felt she had to figure out what it meant before she told anyone else. For a few minutes only the sound of cutlery on china could be heard and Mary used that time to turn over all that had just come to light. In a way, she was glad that she would likely be occupied for the rest of the afternoon. It gave her more time to process everything before she had to explain it to Aiden.
"So will you be hosting the next meeting, Mary?" Veronica asked, derailing Mary's train of thought and sending her off into another direction.
"To be honest, I hadn't thought about it. The Hall isn't really as put together as I would like it to be for so many guests." Mary couldn't look her in they eye as she said it. The thought of hosting so many people terrified her.
"Nonsense. No one's house is as put together as they would like it to be." Veronica laughed softly.
"You could make it an informal gathering." Robbie suggested. "I love having you here, but I know arranging for Aiden to travel isn't easy, or safe at this point."
"I can't deny that." Mary said.
"I could help, if you wanted." Caroline offered.
"I guess I am hosting the next one then." Mary smiled and tried to sound confident.