“I thought you’d like the Darjeeling,” he said. His voice was a pale, apologetic thing. “Not the everyday kind.”
Miranda lay on the cellar cot, her summer dress dusted with chalk from the old stone walls. She did not scream anymore. Her eyes followed him, though, as he descended the wooden stairs, carrying a tray of tea and biscuits.
He smiled—a shy, terrible thing—and pressed the shutter. Click. The flash bleached her face to bone. 1965 the collector
“You can’t keep a person, Fred. Not without them rotting.”
He set the tray on the crate beside the cot, then stepped back to admire her against the grey limestone. In the single bulb’s jaundiced light, she was still beautiful. Still his rarest specimen . He had pinned her without touching a wing. “I thought you’d like the Darjeeling,” he said
She finally spoke. Low. Hoarse.
“You said you wanted freedom,” he whispered, adjusting the focus of the Rolleiflex he’d set up on a tripod. “But freedom’s messy. Out there, you’d just fly into a window, get eaten by a bird. Down here… down here, I can keep you perfect.” She did not scream anymore
“I’ll be the judge of that,” he said. And turned the key again.
The key turned in the lock—not with a sharp click, but a soft, fat thud, like a stone sinking into still water. Frederick Clegg, formerly of the counting house, collector of rare butterflies, felt his ribs tighten with pleasure. He had her now.
She didn’t answer. He liked that less than the screaming. Silence meant she was planning—or dying. Either way, it spoiled the display.