Lies That Comfort and Betray
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Synopsis
The murders in Whitechapel are shocking enough to make news worldwide, and in the autumn of 1888, Geoffrey and Prudence find the stories in the New York Herald quite unsettling. But London is not the only city to be terrorized by a mad butcher.
Nora Kenny makes the occasional journey on the Staten Island ferry to work in Prudence's Fifth Avenue house, just as her mother once served Prudence's mother. As little girls, they played freely together, before retreating into their respective social classes. Still, they remain fond of each other. But when Nora slips away to Saint Anselm's one chilly Saturday to confess her sins and never returns, Prudence is alarmed. And when Nora's body is discovered in a local park, Prudence is devastated.
Nora will not be the only young woman to fall victim, but the police are uncertain what they are dealing with. Has the Ripper sailed across the Atlantic to find a new hunting ground? Is some disturbed soul copying his crimes? A former Pinkerton agent, Geoffrey intends to step in where the New York Metropolitan Police seem to be failing, and Prudence is just as determined to protect the poor, vulnerable females being targeted. But a killer with a disordered mind and an incomprehensible motive may prove too elusive for even this experienced pair to outwit.
Release date: January 30, 2018
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 304
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Lies That Comfort and Betray
Rosemary Simpson
“Have you ever been to London, Josiah?” Geoffrey Hunter set down the New York Times, which was running the same story, but in far less detail; its readership preferred to be informed and only inadvertently titillated. The lead story in the column cabled by their London correspondent was the partisan wrangling of the Parnell Commission. Politics as usual first, then the Ripper.
“I haven’t, sir. Mr. Conkling went, of course. Twice. Once in 1875, then again two years later. He was a great one for seeing everything there was to be seen, but I doubt he ventured into Whitechapel.”
“You still miss him, don’t you, Josiah?”
“Every day. I always will. You can’t spend that much of your life with someone and not regret his absence. I was the senator’s personal secretary from his first swearing in at the House of Representatives in Washington until he died. Almost twenty-nine years.”
“You could retire, if that would suit you.”
“And do what with myself, Mr. Hunter? I’d rather stay on here with you. I’m used to working, and I’m used to this office.”
“What else does the Herald say about Mary Jane Kelly?”
“So much that I’d be careful not to leave the paper lying around where Miss Prudence might pick it up. The Kelly woman was a lady of the evening like all the others the Ripper’s killed, but this time he did more damage to the corpse. The doctor on the scene is quoted as saying it was worse than anything he’s experienced in dissecting rooms. The Ripper cut the body open and took out all of the organs. He sliced her face so badly it didn’t look like a face anymore and nearly severed her head when he slit the throat. Then he hacked off all of her private parts. That’s the short version, Mr. Hunter, and about all I care to read.” Josiah folded the newspaper four times into a neat rectangle that he handed to his employer. “As I say, it’s nothing Miss Prudence should see.”
“I’ve already read the story, Josiah.” The young woman standing in the doorway to Geoffrey Hunter’s office was tall and slender, dressed in black, but without the long, heavy veils of full mourning. It had been more than ten months since her father’s death, nearly eight since her fiancé had been murdered in the worst blizzard the northeastern seaboard had ever known. “You shouldn’t leave the outer office unattended if you don’t want intruders coming in unchallenged.” Prudence MacKenzie smiled to take the sting out of her words, and was immediately transformed from a pretty girl into the kind of delicate beauty men instinctively want to possess and protect.
“Let me take that,” Hunter said, standing to reach for a rectangular package secured in brown paper and tied with butcher’s twine. “What is this, Prudence?”
“It’s the Hunter and MacKenzie stationery,” she said. “I decided I couldn’t wait for delivery. I went by the printer’s on my way here.” Using the scissors Josiah handed her, Prudence cut through the string and then the sturdy wrapping. “What do you think?”
The letter paper was a heavy, off-white bond, the firm’s name engraved across the top of each sheet in a thick calligraphic script. Hunter and MacKenzie, Investigative Law.
Josiah Gregory ran his fingers lightly over the lettering. “Mr. Conkling would have liked this,” he said. “It’s what he hoped for when he made out his will that last time.”
Like Prudence’s fiancé, Roscoe Conkling had been among the 200 New York City casualties of the Great White Blizzard, though it had taken almost a month before the damage done to his body during a long walk up Broadway at the height of the storm finally killed him. When he knew without a doubt that he would not survive, the former senator from New York deeded his office and his law practice to Geoffrey Hunter and wrote a letter in which he urged him to follow a profession that would give meaning to his life. Josiah Gregory, now a man of independent means through his longtime employer’s generosity, had been an unexpected and invaluable bonus.
“I’ll put this away.” Josiah gathered up the new stationery, the wrapping paper, the twine, and the scissors. Moving quickly and quietly, with a deft neatness that defined his every movement and gesture, he retreated to his desk in the outer office. He’d give Miss Prudence and Mr. Hunter a few minutes to themselves before he brought in the coffee tray. November was always cold and damp; nothing made a New York winter bearable like strong, sweet coffee with a good dollop of heavy cream.
“I did read the article about the Ripper’s latest atrocity.” Prudence unfolded the newspaper Josiah had placed on Geoffrey’s desk, settling herself in one of the client chairs to look at the headline. “I cannot imagine what kind of monster would do something like this, not once, but seven separate times. They’re calling him a lunatic and a homicidal maniac. For once I don’t think the press is exaggerating. He has to be insane, Geoffrey. It’s the only explanation that makes any sense. Thank God it’s not happening here.”
“We’ve had our share of killers. No country or society is immune from violence. Think about what we did to one another not very long ago. The war’s been over for twenty-three years, but for some people it’s as though it were still being fought.”
Matthew Brady’s photographs of Union and Confederate dead on shell pocked battlefields had horrified and saddened a nation torn in two by irreconcilable beliefs and a warrior culture that enshrined blood sacrifice. Death had ridden the land for four long years, and when it was finally over, greed galloped in like a fifth horsemen of the Apocalypse.
There were more enormously wealthy men in America now than ever before, but there were also legions of hopelessly poor and homeless men, women, and children. Armies of exploited workers whose wages barely staved off starvation. Violence was commonplace in big city slums, but few of New York City’s killings could match what Jack the Ripper was doing in the far away London cesspit of Whitechapel.
“How could he do what they say he’s done? Especially this latest killing, this Mary Jane Kelly. The reporter writes that he carved her up as casually as a butcher does the carcass of a sheep hanging from a hook in a slaughterhouse. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to understand the man who did that.”
“Would you be able to defend him, Prudence?”
“Women haven’t been admitted to the bar in New York, Geoffrey. It’s only been a few months since New York University finally allowed three women to enroll in their law courses. Whether they’ll graduate with anything equivalent to a law degree is another matter entirely.”
“You didn’t answer my question.”
“I’m not sure I can. My father taught me everything he knew about the law. Even though the lessons took place at home, I learned as much if not more than any intern in any law firm in the city. The Judge made sure of that. But since the bar is closed to women in this state, your question is moot.”
“There was a killer in Austin, Texas, three years ago. He murdered eight people, seven of them women, mostly in service. Chopped them to death with an axe.”
“Did someone defend him?”
“I don’t think the murders have ever been solved.”
“Like Jack the Ripper.”
“One theory is that when a murderer leaves the area where he committed his crimes, he doesn’t stop killing; he starts again in a different place. The Ripper is still somewhere in London; there’s no telling how many more women he’ll kill before something or someone forces him to leave.”
“For an ex-Pinkerton, you don’t sound very optimistic that the Austin killer or the Ripper will ever be caught.”
“I’m not. You can trace a crime passionel to a spurned lover, and a murder committed in the course of a burglary to the man who’s foolish enough to pawn what he’s stolen. You can even link a poisoner to the victim. But if someone kills for the sheer pleasure of killing, and there’s no personal link to his prey, then he’ll only be caught by accident, by some small, fortuitous mistake he doesn’t realize he’s made.”
“At least we don’t have a Ripper in New York City.” Prudence refolded the newspaper, placed it headline down on her partner’s desk.
“Not yet. It’s only a matter of time before someone decides that London shouldn’t have all the glory.”
“Surely not.”
“Sooner or later we’ll have an American Ripper, Prudence. For all we know he’s already at work; the newspapers just haven’t discovered him yet.”
“Can you manage, girl?” Brian Kenny handed his daughter a heavy wicker basket containing the freshly butchered bodies of four of his wife’s finest stewing hens. Wrapped in saltwater soaked toweling, they’d keep nicely until she could hand them over to the MacKenzie cook in the house on Fifth Avenue. “Mind you keep the lid on tight, now. Mrs. Hearne is that careful about what she puts in her soup pot.”
Nora Kenny drew her small, slender self up to her full height of just over five feet. She’d bundled her black hair into a fisherman’s knit cap for the cold, windy ride from Staten Island to Manhattan, but there was nothing she could do to keep the red from her cheeks. Chapped skin and lips were the price you paid in November for having a fair Irish complexion. “I’ll be fine, Da. I’ve carried baskets heavier than this one many a time.”
“Don’t forget it’s Sunday tomorrow. You don’t want to miss Mass.”
“I’ll go to Saint Anselm’s with Colleen.” Nora had become good friends with Miss Prudence’s maid, sharing a room with her whenever she worked at the Fifth Avenue house.
“One of your brothers will be here to meet the ferry next Saturday. Mind you’re on time to catch it. Your ma will worry me to death if you don’t.”
She could feel a blush deepening the scarlet of her already cold reddened cheeks. It was always like that when she had something to hide.
“Go on then. The ferry’s about to pull out.”
A surge of passengers crowded across the dock toward the new paddle wheeler named the Robert Garrett. Nora slung the handle of the wicker basket over one arm, picked up her carpetbag with her free hand, and smiled up at her da. She was his only girl in a family of ten children, six of them still living, thank God. He worried about her more than he did any of the five lads. He’d been reluctant to let her go by herself to help get Miss Prudence’s Fifth Avenue house ready for the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays, but she’d reminded him of how welcome the extra wages would be and he’d given in. Brian had a terrible soft spot for his Nora.
As soon as the Robert Garrett pulled away from Staten Island into the choppy waters of the Hudson River, Nora found herself a comfortable seat in the portside saloon, the basket containing the plucked fowl sitting in an empty seat beside her, carpetbag at her feet. From this side of the ferry she could look out the windows that ran all along its side and see the enormous Statue of Liberty that had gone up on Bedloe’s Island two years before. The weather on the day of the dedication had been bad enough to force cancellation of the planned fireworks. Nora remembered how disappointed they’d all been, crowded onto the family’s two fishing boats to catch a glimpse of President Grover Cleveland, then forced to return to Staten Island in thick fog and heavy rain without having spied a single dignitary. The mist swirling up from the river today reminded her of that late October day in 1886. She and Tim Fahey had just begun walking out.
The ferry wasn’t as crowded today as she’d thought it might be. Most of the seats were taken, but there were none of the weekday crowds pressed against the rails. Nora let her thoughts fly ahead to the mansion on Fifth Avenue where she’d be spending the coming week. She and her mother had both worked for the MacKenzie family since the Judge first built the Staten Island summer house named Windscape where he hoped his wife would recover from the tuberculosis. She didn’t, of course. No one ever did, though sometimes the invalid coughed out bits of his lungs for years until the final hemorrhage.
Nora came to Windscape as a three-year-old, tied by a long rope looped around her waist and fastened to one of the thick wooden legs of the kitchen table so she wouldn’t wander and get into mischief. Agnes Kenny kept a watchful eye on her daughter as she peeled potatoes, polished silverware, or baked the Irish soda bread that Sarah McKenzie loved to nibble with her afternoon cup of tea. The child was four when she was first let loose to play with Miss Prudence, the two of them a lively, mischievous pair whose antics brought a smile and occasionally a laugh to Miss Sarah’s lips. Then a cough. Laughter always exacted a price. Nora remembered the sound of that coughing, how it echoed through the rooms, getting worse and worse until Miss Prudence’s mother stopped coughing and the house became empty and silent.
Once they’d grown out of childhood, which happened early in their young lives, Miss Prudence and Nora seldom met, though Nora continued to accompany her mother whenever Agnes went to Windscape to cook or to clean. The Judge never spoke of selling the house, but he was seldom there. When the summer air in the city was brutally hot and hard to breathe, Judge MacKenzie brought his daughter across the river to the white painted house on the hill, but the young miss was never alone. There was always a nurse or governess or tutor beside her; she’d grown beyond the free, open play of the early years. She was being groomed to take her mother’s place in a society from which Nora would forever be excluded.
That was the way of the world, her mother told her, reading the sadness in her daughter’s expressive blue eyes. Miss Prudence didn’t mean anything by it. She’d just moved deeper into the world she’d been born to, leaving her childhood playmate behind. Where she belonged. It was all about knowing your place and keeping to it. That was why her parents approved of Tim Fahey, why they’d pushed her in his direction and encouraged the engagement even when Nora herself was sure it was no longer what she wanted. Her ma said there wasn’t a finer young man on Staten Island than Tim, and that Nora and Tim fit together as well as they did because they were so much alike. They lived in the same world.
She smiled at her da’s caution to remember to go to Mass tomorrow. One of the reasons she was taking this early ferry was so she could stop by Saint Anselm’s for Saturday confession on her way to Miss Prudence’s house. She’d already confessed this particular sin to Father Devlin on the island more times than she cared to think about. She was sure he hadn’t recognized her yet through the screen, but eventually he would and then there’d be hell to pay. Priests weren’t allowed to reveal what they were told in confession, but she couldn’t afford to take any chances.
She could walk in off the street to Saint Anselm’s and be just another blue eyed, black haired Irish girl. Lost in the crowd. She’d been to Mass there many times with Colleen, but she didn’t know any of the priests personally and they didn’t know her. She’d whisper her sin through the grille, bow her head for absolution, gabble her penance at the altar rail, and be on her way. Ten or fifteen minutes at most. The hens wouldn’t mind.
The other stop she had to make was more important. She decided to go there first, just in case it took longer than she had planned for. If she didn’t make it to Saint Anselm’s before confessions ended for the day she’d have to lie to her mother about receiving Communion on Sunday because you couldn’t go to the altar with a mortal sin on your soul.
Then it would be back to Father Devlin again when she got home because she knew she wasn’t going to stop. She was caught already, so what could it matter?
Unless something happened in the meantime. Unless she was wrong.
She’d told so many lies by now that a few more wouldn’t trouble her conscience at all.
Weekly confessions at Saint Anselm’s started at midafternoon during the winter months. The November sun usually set by five o’clock and even with snow on the ground to reflect the light from streetlamps, it was dark as well as cold. People wanted to get home.
This Saturday only one of the three priests assigned to the parish was on duty. Father Gerard Mahoney, Saint Anselm’s sixty-year-old pastor, was confined to his bed with a mustard plaster on his chest. Father Kearns, the assistant pastor, had been called to the bedside of a dying child.
“I’ll manage,” Father Mark Brennan assured both his colleagues.
“Give them all five Our Fathers, five Hail Marys, and five Glory Bes,” coughed Father Mahoney. “The faster you get them in and out, the more they’ll thank you for it.” The pastor had been known to say an entire Mass from Introíbo ad altáre Dei to Ite, Missa Est in twenty minutes flat.
It wasn’t Father Brennan’s way to rush his flock along like sheep being herded to the shearing pen. He scrupulously matched each sin to its appropriate penance, not forgetting to accuse himself of the sin of pride for lacking humility in the doing of God’s holy work.
The line outside his confessional box was long, stretching halfway down a side aisle. He took his time with each sinner, and as a result many would-be receivers of the sacrament gave up and went home, especially once four-thirty had come and gone. Parishioners popped their heads through the massive wooden central doors, took a look at the length of the line, lingered a moment to gauge how quickly, in this case how slowly, people were entering and emerging from the curtained side boxes. They dipped their fingers into the holy water font, made a sketchy sign of the cross, and were out again before their coats had finished steaming in the indoor air. They wished Father Brennan would learn to speed things up. This wasn’t the old country; everyone in America was in a hurry.
It occurred to Nora Kenny that she ought to step out of line and be on her way to the MacKenzie mansion, but once she made up her mind, she seldom changed it. Both the Kenny parents and all of the lads were like that, too. Obstinate, mulish, as immovable in their determination as an Irishman could be. And proud of it.
She reminded herself of the other reason she wouldn’t give up today. Agnes Kenny expected all of her children to walk to the communion rail every Sunday, and God help the one who didn’t. So if Nora was to allay any suspicions her mother might have about her recent excuses to slip away from the house on her own, she had to receive Communion next Sunday. Today was her last chance to confess to a priest who could be counted on not to recognize her. She hoped the hens weren’t warming up too much. She couldn’t smell them, so they must be all right.
When it was finally her turn, Nora stepped into the confessional, knelt, and made the sign of the cross. “Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. It’s been one week since my last confession.”
It wasn’t as dark as in the church on Staten Island; Nora could see more than just a shadow on the other side of the curtained grille. This priest was young and handsome, his hair nearly as dark as hers, the hand he raised in the blessing long fingered and finely sculpted. She wondered if he would look in her direction; most priests faced forward and only leaned sideways a bit toward the penitent.
She started with the venial sins, the way she always did, hoping that when she slipped in the great big embarrassing mortal sin of committing impure acts he might be busy with his own prayers and not notice. But he did.
“Did you commit the sin of impurity with yourself or with another?”
The question shocked her. The priest on Staten Island had never asked Nora Kenny for details. “With another, Father.”
“Are either of you married?”
“No, Father.”
“How many times did you commit this sin of impurity since your last confession?”
“Twice, Father.” She could feel the sweat beading on her forehead. Her voice was shaky, and she thought she might cry. Why couldn’t he just give her a penance and absolution and be done with it?
“Have you thought that a child might be conceived?”
She didn’t answer, afraid her voice might penetrate the long dark red curtain that fell over the backs of her legs. Unwilling to risk losing the little control remaining to her.
She heard a deep sigh and knew he was finally finished.
“For your penance I want you to kneel before Our Lady’s statue while you say five decades of the rosary. Ask Our Blessed Mother for the grace to stay chaste.”
She was sure tears were making tracks down her cheeks.
“Now make a good Act of Contrition and tell Our Lady how sorry you are to have sinned against purity.”
Just before Nora lowered her face into her cupped hands to whisper the Act of Contrition, she felt his eyes on her. Dark brown eyes in a stern face. One glimpse through the fan of her fingers, but it was enough. This was the kind of priest everyone tried to avoid, the kind who took things too seriously and could make life miserable. She supposed she deserved it, though. She’d tried to avoid Father Devlin and this was the punishment she got.
She asked a man leaving the church ahead of her what time it was. Quarter past five. Just enough time to drop the hens at the MacKenzie house and get herself back to Saint Anselm’s by six to say her five decades of the rosary. She’d learned in First Holy Communion class that you had to do your penance to make the absolution stick. The nun teaching them hadn’t used those exact words, but that was the gist of it. If she ran both ways and didn’t stop for a gossip when she gave Cook the hens, she could just make it.
There would still be time afterwards to complete her other errand, the one she couldn’t tell anyone about. Seven o’clock. That’s when her things would be ready and she could pick them up.
It was early dusk. The lamplights hissed softly in the cold evening air. Nora was surprised how easy it was to navigate the sidewalk despite the heavy basket bumping against her hip. There was no smell of dead hen coming from it, and when she reached a hand in, the cloths in which they were wrapped were still damp and cool. Almost as good as keeping them on ice, she thought. She passed few women as she walked; it was mostly men striding along in a hurry to get out of the cold, faces muffled in wool scarves, gloved hands carrying parcels or leather briefcases. Horses clopped by, nostrils breathing out steam, drivers hunched over to catch a draft of warmth from their broad backs. She’d give anything to be in one of those hansom cabs, but even if she had the money, no one would stop for a girl out all alone after dark.
Nora breathed a sigh of relief when she recognized the MacKenzie mansion, a thick blanket of green ivy climbing over its deep redbrick facade. Quick now, down the areaway steps to the kitchen door.
But when she hauled on the bellpull, she heard no sound of ringing inside. No footsteps tapped their way to the door. She didn’t have time to stand there and try to figure out where everybody was.
She thought about pounding on the door and calling out, but what if a policeman were passing by and heard her? He’d haul her off without waiting to listen to an explanation and then she’d really be in trouble. She yanked on the bellpull one more time, then set down her basket, turned on her heels, and sped up the concrete steps to the street. Moments later she was back on Fifth Avenue, dodging and ducking her way toward Saint Anselm’s.
She didn’t expect to be climbing the broad stone steps of the church alone. She had looked forward to the comfort of light streaming out into the darkness as the doors opened and closed behind parishioners stopping by for a quick prayer or to light a candle on their way home from work. Catholic churches were never entirely empty.
But the wide steps were barren and Saint Anselm’s had the look of a church settling into locked emptiness for the night.
Nora scurried through the vestibule, her shoes clattering on the stone floor. It was warmer inside the church itself, with a comforting fustiness hanging in the air, as though the people who had stood in the aisle waiting to go to confession had left bits of themselves behind—the smell of damp wool and wet leather shoes, that tangy scent of unwashed winter clothing and skin, the tobacco smoked by the men, the cheap scent worn by the women. It reminded her of going into the parlor at home before her mother readied up the coal stove and sent the wonderful smells of supper wafting through the rooms.
The church was dim because no one had turned on the huge, newly electrified chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. Banks of votive candles flickered at the side altars and the blood red sanctuary lamp burned steadily beside the tabernacle to remind her that Christ was present. God was here.
Nora genuflected, made the sign of the cross, and crept into a pew close to the side altar where a larger than life Virgin Mary in blue robes and white veil looked down at her. The kneeler boomed against the floor as she pulled it out and it slipped from her cold fingers. She glanced around guiltily. No one had heard. There was no one kneeling behind or to either side of her. No matter. She needed to get started on the five decades of the rosary she had to say.
She heard a sound like a key turning in a lock, but muffled, as if it came from the vestibule. Not a lock, but the click of one of the switches that turned on the electric lights? She waited for brightness to flood down, and looked up to see the chandeliers come ablaze, but the dimness all around her did not change. She clung more tightly to the rosary beads she’d wound around her fingers, feeling the sharpness of the small silver crucifix digging into the palm of her hand. She’d never been by herself inside a church before. No matter that the sanctuary lamp proclaimed the presence of Christ, Nora felt very alone and now very frightened.
She made her mind up quickly. Intention was all important when it came to sin, and she’d intended to say her rosary at the Virgin’s feet. She’d kneel beside her bed in Colleen’s room tonight instead and tag on an extra decade for the absence of a statue.
Nora got to her feet and scrambled out into the aisle, shoving the rosary beads into her coat pocket, pulling out the warm mittens her mother had knitted for her. She bobbed awkwardly in the general direction of the altar, then turned and fled toward the vestibule, pushing open the swinging doors with both outstretched arms, feet flying across the stone floor. Her hands flattened themselves against the outer doors and her body followed, pushing desperately to make them open. Nothing. They didn’t yield to her pounding fists or to the sobs that burst from her throat. Why were the doors locked? Why hadn’t someone looked into the church to make sure it was empty before closing up for the night?
She turned to go back the way she had come. There was a small side door opening onto a narrow alley that ran the length of the church. She’d seen people ducking out that way after Mass when they were in a hurry and didn’t want to have to stop and talk to the priest standing outside on the main steps.
But the door she had just run through wouldn’t budge. She didn’t remember hearing it happen, but somehow it must have locked itself behind her. She was trapped in the vestibule.
The only thing she could do was make so much noise that a passerby would hear something odd and stop at the rectory next door to tell the housekeeper or one of the priests. Nora pounded until her arms went numb and then flamed in pain; she yelled and screamed until her throat closed up and nothing came out but a hoarse croak. Finally, all strength and hope gone, she slid down onto the stone floor, back propped against the wooden door, legs stretched out in front of her, bruised hands lying slack and useless in her lap, too spent and tired even to cry.
She wondered if anyone would be surprised that she hadn’t kept her seven o’clock appointment. No matter. As soon as the church was unlocked tomorrow morning she’d be on her way. Colleen would scold her for not showing up when she was supposed to, and then together they’d have a good laugh about it.
When she began to tremble with the cold, Nora crawled to the lost and found chest against the side wall and pulled out coats, scarves, and sweaters that smelled of dust and other people. She made a nest on the floor and curled up into the bits of clothing, singing and humming to herself to keep up her courage. She thought about the soup her mother made from hens like the ones she’d left in the MacKenzie areaway. Hot chicken broth with lovely chunks of meat and vegetables floating around in it. She could taste it on her tongue, feel the heat in her empty belly. And how nice it would be to close icy fingers around the warmth of the bowl.
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