“Are you sure you’re up to this?” Sarah asked in concern.
This time Mrs. Ellsworth’s expression was contemptuous. “Are you serious? I haven’t felt this alive since I found out about that poor girl’s death. I’m going whether you help me or not, so unless you want a parade of reporters following us to the hospital, I suggest you go along with my plan to distract them.”
Sarah didn’t even need to think it over. “What do you want me to do?”
As they entered Bellevue Hospital, Sarah glanced down at her companion with admiration. Mrs. Ellsworth had swathed herself in a heavy veil that concealed every trace of her identity. She didn’t look particularly out of place, either, since women in mourning often went veiled, and her plan to escape the reporters’ notice had worked beautifully.
Sarah had endured another round of shouted questions when she left the Ellsworths’ house, and had successfully ignored them until the reporters got tired of following her and returned to their vigil. By the time she reached the appointed meeting place, Mrs. Ellsworth was waiting for her, the market basket hanging over her arm, filled with nutritious foods for Webster Prescott.
The two had taken the Sixth Avenue El up to Twenty-Sixth Street instead of walking over to Second Avenue in order to get off the street as quickly as possible. No one had even looked at them twice, though. They had arrived at their destination without incident.
When they reached the ward where Prescott lay, Sarah could see down the length of the room that a woman was sitting next to him, on the far side of his bed.
“It looks as if his aunt is already here,” Sarah said with some surprise.
“I thought you only sent her word this morning. How could she have gotten here so quickly?”
“I don’t… Oh, yes, it was in the newspaper this morning that he was attacked. Maybe she saw it and came over without being summoned. At any rate, we can certainly ask her,” Sarah pointed out, leading the way to where the woman sat beside Prescott’s bed.
Sarah noticed Prescott’s aunt was also veiled, although hers was shorter and much lighter than Mrs. Ellsworth’s. She was, Sarah knew, a widow, and she probably wore the veil all the time. Such elaborate mourning was a little excessive, but some women enjoyed flaunting their grief.
As they approached, she saw that the woman was trying to feed Prescott something, but he kept turning his head away.
He said something that sounded like, “Tastes bad,” and she could hear his aunt coaxing him softly, the way one did with ill-tempered sick people.
“Mrs. Beasley,” Sarah called when they were near enough.
Mrs. Beasley didn’t turn. She just kept coaxing Prescott to eat. She must, Sarah thought, be hard of hearing.
“Mrs. Beasley!” she called more loudly as they reached Prescott’s bed. “I’m Sarah Brandt, a friend of your nephew’s.”
Mrs. Beasley’s head came up in surprise, and she jumped to her feet, dropping the bowl from which she had been feeding her nephew. It spilled on the bed, all over Prescott, and Sarah and Mrs. Ellsworth instinctively reached to salvage what they could of the porridge.
“I’m so sorry,” Sarah said. “I didn’t mean to startle you.” But when she looked up to reassure Mrs. Beasley, she saw only the woman’s back as she hurried away, nearly running in her fright.
“Oh, dear,” Mrs. Ellsworth said, watching her disappear out the door. “She’s quite shy, isn’t she?”
“I certainly didn’t mean to frighten her. I should go after her and apologize,” Sarah said.
“No!” Prescott said, surprising both women.
“Mr. Prescott?” Sarah tried, wondering if he was talking to her. “How are you feeling?”
“No,” he said again, obviously not hearing her at all. “Too sweet… Tastes… bad.”
That’s what he’d been saying to his aunt. Sarah wondered what the woman had been feeding him that had caused such a reaction. She lifted the nearly empty bowl to her nose and took a sniff.
How odd, she thought, certain she must be mistaken. But when she dipped her finger in and took a taste, she cried out in alarm.
“Good heavens!” Mrs. Ellsworth exclaimed, but Sarah was calling for the nurse.
One of the nurses came rushing over. “Whatever is the matter?”
“That woman was trying to poison Mr. Prescott!” Sarah cried.
“Poison!” Mrs. Ellsworth was saying, over and over, but the nurse wasn’t as impressed.
“Who are you to know such a thing?” the nurse demanded skeptically.
“I’m a trained nurse, and if you don’t believe me, taste this for yourself.” She offered the bowl to the woman, who reared back in alarm.
“You want me to taste poison?” she asked, horrified.
“It’s opium,” Sarah said. “A very strong mixture.”
Instantly, the woman paled. “What on earth would she have been giving him that for?” she asked.
“Probably to kill him,” Sarah said impatiently. “Now hurry and find a doctor.”
“Is there a chance to save him?” Mrs. Ellsworth asked.
“He may have saved himself if he refused to eat very much of it,” Sarah said, rolling up her sleeves and getting ready to work on Prescott.
“Will he be all right, do you think?” Mrs. Ellsworth asked her later, after the doctor had finished examining Prescott. He lay peacefully on his pillow, but he looked awfully pale from being poked and prodded as the doctor checked to see if he showed any evidence of opium poisoning. He’d been very weak and ill to begin with, and now… Sarah simply didn’t know. At least the doctor had felt sure he hadn’t ingested very much of the opium. If the strain of being saved didn’t kill him, he’d probably recover.
The two women were keeping a vigil by his bed. They’d found the basket the woman had used to bring the poisoned porridge into the hospital. Unfortunately, the basket was the kind that was available at every market in the city, and it contained no clue as to who the woman might have been.
“Well,” Mrs. Ellsworth said, “I think we can be fairly certain that woman wasn’t his aunt.”
“She may have been the one who tried to kill him the first time, though,” Sarah said. “She could have seen the newspaper story, figured out where he would be, and decided to finish him off.”
“Did you see what she looked like?”
“No,” Sarah said with a rueful smile. “You were right, a veil is the perfect disguise.”
Mrs. Ellsworth had removed hers, and she smiled back at Sarah. “You probably thought I was a worthless old woman.”
“I haven’t thought that for a long time, not since I saw how you can handle an iron skillet,” Sarah said, recalling the time Mrs. Ellsworth had rescued her.
“Oh, yes,” Mrs. Ellsworth remembered. “One never knows what one is capable of until the time comes, does one?” She leaned back in her chair with a satisfied grin.
Sarah grinned back. “Now all you have to do is worry about keeping Mr. Prescott alive.”
“After what we’ve already been through, it will probably be very dull work indeed, but I’ll do my best. Now I’m sure you have some investigating of your own to do. I’ll be fine, and if any veiled women show up and try to give Mr. Prescott something to eat, you can rest assured I will raise the alarm… or the skillet, if necessary.”
“I know I can count on you. Meanwhile, I’ve got to find Mr. Malloy and let him know what’s happened here.”
Frank stood on Giddings’s front porch and waited for someone to answer his knock. He’d seen the front curtain twitch, so he knew his presence had been noted. He’d give them another moment before he started pounding and shouting and generally causing a disturbance.
Fortunately, Mrs. Giddings wasn’t willing to risk a scene. She opened the door and admitted Frank without a word, closing the door quickly behind him. Her expression told him how much she loathed the sight of him, but she was too much of a lady to actually say so.