The Edge of Dreams (Molly Murphy Mysteries, #14)

“Good idea.” I nodded agreement.

“And since we won’t have time for a proper meal, Sid has made a cold soup,” Gus went on. “And there is salad left from luncheon. Help yourself whenever you feel like it, Molly.”

I took some cold cucumber soup, fed Liam, and by the time I had put him to bed I heard a knock at the front door, followed by women’s voices in animated conversation. The first of the ladies had arrived. I spruced myself up and came downstairs to find four women seated in the wicker chairs in the conservatory. Two of them were earnest young women I had met before on a similar occasion. The other two were older women and unfamiliar to me. They both looked like solid and affluent matrons, and it was quite a surprise to find them at such a subversive meeting. While we were exchanging pleasantries, more women kept arriving, until there were ten of us.

“That’s all, I think,” Sid said, looking around with satisfaction. “A good number at such short notice, don’t you think?”

“It’s hard for so many of the sisters to get away,” one of the older women said. She had an air of authority to her, as if she had once been a schoolmistress, and I thought that I wouldn’t like to cross her. “If they are married, their evenings are devoted to serving dinner to their husbands and putting the children to bed. You might have better luck if you schedule the next meeting for the morning or afternoon. No husband objects to his wife attending a coffee morning with friends, but they are highly suspicious of a woman who wants to go out at night alone.”

“I suppose you’re right,” Sid said, “but I was thinking of our young unmarried women who work during the day. At least five of us are gainfully employed.”

“Really?” the older woman asked. “As what?”

“I work in a bank,” one of them said.

“And I in a flower shop.”

“I’m a teacher,” the little redhead I had met before added.

“And I am a typewriter for a firm of lawyers.”

“Mercy me,” the older woman said. “I had heard that those typewriting machines were simply too strenuous for young women to handle.”

The girl laughed. “That falsehood was spread by men who fear that women are encroaching on their jobs and don’t want us in the workplace.”

“Well, good for you, I say,” the other older woman said loudly. She was rounder and jollier looking, like a friendly grandmother. “It warms my heart to see young women taking up such varied positions. When we can add lawyer and senator to that list, I’ll be well satisfied.”

“Not in your lifetime, I fear, Mrs. Mitchum,” Sid said.

“Mrs. Sullivan was a detective, if I remember correctly,” the earnest, dark-haired young woman said. I tried to remember her name.

They all looked at me in astonishment, making my cheeks turn red. “That’s right,” I said. “I ran my own detective agency until I married.”

“And her husband forced her to give it up,” Sid added, with a sideways glance at me.

“Isn’t that always the way,” one of them muttered. “Men can’t abide the thought of a woman with a career, especially a successful one.”

“To be fair to Daniel,” I answered, “he is a captain in the police department, and a wife who worked as a private investigator would not be tolerated. Besides, he wants to protect me and keep me safe. It’s a natural male instinct.”

“Not all of us want to be protected,” the dark-haired girl said. “I’m perfectly capable of standing on my own two feet.”

“How about you, Mrs. Hamilton?” Gus asked as she came in with a tray of sandwiches. “Sid and I remember you as a rather terrifying senior in our dorm. We always tiptoed past your room.”

“You were at school together?” Mrs. Mitchum asked.

“At Vassar. We have several alumnae in this group.” Gus indicated the redhead and two others.

“Yes, I was a senior when these two were obnoxious little freshmen,” Mrs. Hamilton laughed. “Always trying to sneak out of the dorm at night, I remember. How wonderful that your friendship has lasted all this time.”

“Yes, it is wonderful,” Gus said, glancing across at Sid.

“And neither of you has married?”

“No. Neither of us has married,” Gus replied evenly. “Another cucumber sandwich, Mrs. Hamilton?”

“Sometimes I think we all would have been wiser not to,” Mrs. Hamilton said. “I find the raising of four sons quite taxing, and I have almost no time for my own pursuits. And now I have the care of my young niece as well, which is not easy. But it is the path I have chosen, I suppose.” She pushed back an imaginary strand of hair from her face, as if in annoyance. Then she turned back to Gus. “Did I not hear that you spent the summer in Paris?”

“We did,” Sid said. “Miss Walcott pursued her art. Her painting was much admired.”