What Darkness Brings Page 20
Devlin’s gaze met hers. “If we knew that, we might know who killed him.”
Chapter 37
“A
h, Lord Devlin,” said Sir Henry Lovejoy when Sebastian stopped by Bow Street to see him later that afternoon. “I was just about to send a message round to Brook Street. I’ve discovered some interesting information about that fellow you asked me to look into.”
“You mean Jud Foy?”
“That’s the one, yes.”
“You’ve found him?”
“Not yet, no. But I thought you might like to know that it seems he was once a rifleman.”
“With what regiment?”
“The 114th Foot. He was invalided out in 1809.”
“Good God, is he Sergeant Judah Foy?”
“He is, yes.” Something of Sebastian’s reaction must have shown on his face, because Lovejoy’s eyes narrowed. “You know him?”
“You could say that.”
Tyson was cupping wafers at Menton’s Shooting Gallery when Sebastian came to stand off to one side and quietly watch. The man’s movements were smooth and assured, his aim as flawless as one might expect of someone who’d purchased his first pair of colors at the age of sixteen.
He shot three more times before looking over at Sebastian and saying, “I take it you’re not here for the entertainment value?”
Sebastian crossed his arms at his chest and smiled. “Don’t mind me.”
Tyson’s handsome features remained impassive. But Sebastian saw his eyes darken. He handed his flintlock to the attendant and stripped off the leather guards he wore to protect his cuffs from the powder. “I’ve finished.”
Sebastian watched him walk over to pour water into a basin and wash his hands. “Tell me about Jud Foy.”
Tyson paused for a moment, then went back to soaping his hands. “Who?”
“You do remember Sergeant Judah Foy, don’t you? He was a rifleman with your regiment. Not only that, but he’s the sergeant who testified in your defense at your court-martial. If it hadn’t been for him, you’d have hanged.”
“I remember him.”
“I must admit,” said Sebastian, “his appearance has changed so radically that I didn’t recognize him.”
Tyson shook the water from his hands and reached for the towel offered by an attendant. “I’m not surprised. He got kicked in the head by one of the supply wagon’s mules. He’s never been right since then, which is a polite way of saying the man belongs in a madhouse.”
“You wouldn’t happen to know where I might find him?”
“Did you try Bedlam?”
Sebastian shook his head. “He’s very much a free man. And he seems to be laboring under the opinion that he’s suffered some sort of injustice. Do you know anything about that?”
Tyson tossed the towel aside. “As I recall, after the accident he had difficulty distinguishing between his own property and that of others. Why? What does any of this have to do with me?”
“I don’t know that it does.”
Tyson reached for his coat and shrugged into it. “I told you, the man is mad.”
“Is he dangerous?”
“He may well be.” Tyson adjusted his cuffs. “Do you think him involved in Eisler’s murder in some way?”
“Was Foy acquainted with Eisler?”
“Now, how would I know? The man was a sergeant—not exactly one of my intimates.”
“Unlike Beresford?”
Tyson looked over at him. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Did you know Eisler was in the habit of acquiring information about people and then using it against them?”
Tyson turned to walk toward the entrance. “I can’t say I’m surprised. Are you?”
Sebastian fell into step beside him. “It occurs to me that Eisler could have been playing his tricks on Blair Beresford—threatening to tell Hope about his gambling losses.”
Tyson looked over at him. “What makes you think Beresford has gambling debts?”
“He told me himself.”
“Beresford isn’t exactly what you’d consider a ripe target for blackmail. He has no money—as Eisler himself obviously knew all too well.”
“To my knowledge, Eisler’s form of blackmail was more subtle than your normal variety of extortion.”
Something flickered across Tyson’s face, then was gone. “Perhaps. But I can’t imagine what Beresford has that might have interested Eisler. He’s the younger son of a small Irish landowner, in London for a few months.”
“Seems an unusual friend for someone who spent ten years fighting from India to Spain.”
Tyson drew up on the flagway before the shooting gallery. The golden September sunlight fell hard across his face, accentuating the harsh lines and deep grooves dug there by a decade of forced marches and indifferent rations and overexposure to a fierce tropical sun. “What are you suggesting? That I ought to be spending my days at the Fox and Hound, knocking back tankards of stout and reminiscing with my fellow officers about the good old days? I’m twenty-six, not seventy-six. Blair Beresford is quick-witted and endlessly amusing. He’s also a brilliant poet. He took the Newdigate Prize at Oxford for one of his poems. Did you know?”
“No.”
“There is much that you do not know.” Tyson squinted up at the sun. “And now you really must excuse me. I’ve an appointment with my tailor.”
Sebastian watched the lieutenant turn to saunter toward Bond Street, but stopped him by saying, “How did you happen to meet Beresford, anyway?”
Tyson pivoted slowly to face him again, his dark eyes narrowing with a tight smile that could have meant anything. “We met through Yates.”
Then he touched his hand to his hat and walked on.
Since her marriage to Russell Yates, Kat Boleyn had lived in a sprawling town house on Cavendish Square. It was a fashionable address favored by the nobility and wealthy merchants and bankers, all of whom no doubt looked upon their notorious new neighbors with scandalized horror. Kat might have been the most acclaimed actress on the London stage, but she was still an actress. And although it was not well-known, she’d once survived as a homeless, abused child on the streets of London by selling the only the thing of value she possessed: herself.
It was a time she rarely spoke of. But Sebastian had seen the way she looked at the young, ragged girls who haunted the back alleys of Covent Garden. He knew only too well the mark those days had left upon her. He’d tried to ease the damage done to her by that desperate time, by the English soldiers who’d raped and killed her mother, by her aunt’s lecherous husband. But he knew he’d never really succeeded. And he found himself pondering why he was remembering these things now, as he mounted the steps to her front door. For Kat was a woman who asked for neither pity nor solace, but who forged her own victories. . . .
And her own revenge.
She was crossing the vast marbled entry hall when her staid butler opened the door to Sebastian. He saw the breath of surprise that shadowed her face at the sight of him, for she had been married a year and yet this was the first time he had ever come here, to the house she shared with Yates.
“Devlin,” she said, taking both his hands to draw him into a nearby salon. “What is it? Have you discovered something?”
She wore a simple gown of white figured muslin sashed in primrose, with a delicate strand of pearls threaded through the dark, auburn-shot fall of her curls, and he held her fingers just a shade too long before squeezing them and letting her go. “Nothing that makes any sense yet. But I don’t like the way Yates’s name keeps coming up the more I look into things.”
She held his gaze squarely, her eyes deep and vividly blue and so much like those of the man who was her father and not his that it still hurt, just to look at her.
She said, “He didn’t do it, Sebastian.”
“Maybe he didn’t. But I’m beginning to suspect he knows far more about what is going on than he would have me believe.” He drew her over to sit beside him on a sofa near the window. “Are you familiar with a man named Blair Beresford?”
Kat Boleyn might never receive invitations to London’s most exclusive balls and parties, but she still socialized with Yates’s easygoing male friends and acted as hostess at his dinners. She thought about it a moment, then shook her head. “I don’t believe so. Why? Who is he?”
“A beautiful, curly-headed, blue-eyed Irish poet only lately down from Oxford.”
She gave a soft laugh. “In general, Yates has very little patience with poets—especially those just down from Oxford.”
“What about an army lieutenant named Matt Tyson? Mid-twenties. Dark. Also good-looking, although not in Beresford’s boyish way. Has a rather rakish scar on his chin.”
“Him I do know. Yates finds him amusing.”
Amusing. It was the same word Tyson had used to describe Beresford. “But you don’t like him?” said Sebastian.
Her smile faded. “He’s never been anything except charming and gracious to me. But . . .”
“But?”
“Let’s just say I wouldn’t ever want to turn my back on him—metaphorically speaking, of course.”
“Do you know if he”—Sebastian hesitated, struggling for a way to put his question into words—“has the same inclinations as Yates?”
She understood what he meant. “I don’t know. But I can ask.” She tipped her head to one side, her gaze on his face, and he wondered what she saw there. She was always far too good at knowing what he was thinking. “Why did you come here to me, Devlin? Why not ask Yates directly?”
“Because I’m not convinced he is being as honest with me as he could be.”
She pushed up from the sofa and went to fiddle with the heavy satin drapes at the window overlooking the square.
“What?” he asked, watching her.
She exhaled a long breath. “To be frank, I’m not certain he’s being exactly honest with me either.”
“Why? Why would he lie?”
She shook her head. “I don’t know.” But her gaze slid from his in a way he did not like.
He said, “Do you know anything about a large blue diamond whose sale Eisler was handling? A diamond that may once have formed part of the French Crown Jewels?”
He watched her carefully and saw no trace of anything in her face other than puzzlement and surprise, followed swiftly by what looked very much like fear.
But then, he reminded himself, it would never do to forget that Kat was an actress. A very good one. And it struck him as ironic and troubling that he found himself doubting both of the women in his life—although for vastly different reasons.
She said, “What are you suggesting? That the French are somehow involved in Eisler’s murder?”
“You know about Napoléon’s quest to recover the French Crown Jewels?”
“Yes.”
A simple answer that told him she probably knew more than he did. Once, she had worked for the French, passing secrets to Napoléon’s agents in an effort to weaken England and free Ireland. She claimed she’d severed that relationship long ago. But Sebastian suspected she still had contacts with her old confederates—as did Yates.
He said, “Who would Napoléon task to secure the diamond? Would he send in someone new? Or would he use a contact already in place?”
“It’s difficult to say. He’s taken both approaches in the past.”
“Would it be possible to find out?”
He half expected her to tell him no. Instead, she twitched the heavy drape in place and smoothed it down, although it already hung straight. “I can try.”
He let his gaze drift over the familiar planes of her face: the thickly lashed, slightly tilted eyes; the small, childlike nose; the wide, sensual mouth. His love for her still coursed deep and strong, as he knew it always would. He had loved her since he was so very young, untested by battle and as yet untouched by the bitterest of disillusionments. Even when he’d believed she’d betrayed him—even when he had tried to forget her—he had loved her still. Their souls had touched in a way granted to few, and he knew that even if he never saw her again, his life would forever be entwined with hers.
But he also knew that with every passing day, the distance between them yawned subtly deeper and wider.
And it disturbed him to realize the extent to which he neither trusted nor believed her.
Chapter 38
A
fter Devlin left, Kat sat down and composed a carefully worded note she dispatched to a certain Irish gentleman of her acquaintance. Then she ordered her carriage and set off for Newgate Prison.
She found Yates standing beside his cell’s small, barred window overlooking the Press Yard. There was an uncharacteristic tension in the way he held himself, and she went to slide her arms around his waist and press her cheek against his taut back in a quiet gesture of friendship and comfort. They were two outcasts who’d made common cause together against both their enemies and the disapproving world. In many ways, he was like the brother she had never had. And she found she had to squeeze her eyes shut against a sudden upsurge of unexpected emotion at the thought of losing him.
“This is a pleasant surprise,” he said, closing his hands over hers and tilting back his head until it rested against hers. “I didn’t expect to see you again today. Shouldn’t you be getting ready for the theater?”
“I’ve time yet.”
Beneath her encircling arms, she felt his torso expand with his breath. He said, “Your dashing viscount came to see me this morning.”
“Devlin isn’t my viscount anymore.”
“True. But then, he’s not exactly your brother either, is he?” When she remained silent, he said, “I’m sorry. That was totally uncalled for.”
“It’s all right,” she said softly.
He nodded toward the window, where the ancient masonry that formed the prison’s gatehouse was just visible. “Do you know what that chamber is over there, right above the entrance gate? They call it ‘Jack Ketch’s kitchen.’ I’m told that’s where they used to preserve the quartered bodies of those executed for treason, before putting them on display around the metropolis. They’d boil them in vast cauldrons full of pitch, tar, and oil. Must have smelled . . . ghastly. The heads were treated to a different process, of course; those were parboiled with bay, salt, and cumin. I suppose I should be thankful that in our own more enlightened era, I can look forward to merely dancing the hempen jig for the amusement of the populace, before being given over to the surgeons for the edification of their students.”
“You’re not going to hang.”
A faint smile touched his lips. “The verdict of the coroner’s inquest is in. My trial has been scheduled for Saturday; did you know?”
“Oh, God. So soon?” She was aware of a pressing sense of urgency that came close to panic. And she understood, then, why he had been standing here watching the last of the light fade from his prison’s walls.
She said, “Is there anything you know about Eisler that you haven’t told Devlin?”
“I don’t think so.” He turned to face her. “Do you think I want to hang?”
She studied his dark, handsome face, the gold pirate’s hoop in his ear winking in the fading light. She said, “To be honest, I don’t understand why you’re still in prison. Jarvis could have had all charges against you dropped days ago, only he hasn’t done it. He knows you have the power to destroy him; all you need do is release the evidence you have against him. Yet he’s not afraid. Why not?”
He remained silent. But she read the answer in his face.
“It’s bec
ause of me, isn’t it?” she whispered. “That’s what he told you when he came to see you the night of your arrest. He warned you that the documents you hold can protect you, or they can protect me, but they can’t protect us both.”
Yates held himself very still.
She said, “I’m right, aren’t I? He told you that if you made any move against him, he’d have me killed.”
Yates turned to where a bottle of his best brandy stood beside a glass. “Unfortunately, I’ve only the one glass. May I offer you something to drink?”
She shook her head.
“You don’t mind if I do?” He poured himself a large measure. “So you see,” he said, setting the bottle aside, “I have even more incentive to cooperate with your viscount than you previously thought.”
He took a long, slow swallow of his brandy and looked over at her. “You came for a reason; what was it?”
“Devlin wanted me to ask you about Matt Tyson.”
Yates frowned. “I already told him I know the man only slightly. What more is there?”
“Where did you meet him?”
“In a molly house on Pall Mall. Why?”
Kat sucked in a quick breath. “So he’s a molly?”
“Of course he is. So is Beresford.”
The last of the light was leaching rapidly from the sky.
Kat knew she should be at the theater, preparing for that evening’s performance. Instead, she went for a stroll through the flower stalls of Covent Garden Market.
Already, the square lay in deep shadow, the few remaining vegetable and fruit sellers scrambling to hawk their fading produce, cheap, before closing for the night. Only the florists, nurserymen, and bouquet girls were still doing a brisk trade, selling flowers to the theater, music hall, and restaurant managers and to earnest beaux looking for posies to present to their lovers. The air was full of laughter and shouting and a sweet, familiar medley of floral scents that always took her back to another time, another place.
When she was a little girl growing up in a small white house overlooking the misty emerald swath of a Dublin green, Kat’s mother and stepfather used to take her to the market that set up every Wednesday afternoon in the cobbled medieval square of their parish church. She could remember running excitedly from one stall to the next, exclaiming over the displays of satin hair ribbons and lace collars and carved wooden tops. But her mother’s favorite stalls were always those selling bunches of yellow daffodils and rainbow-hued tulips, or pots of rue and pennyroyal, hollyhock seedlings and briar rose cuttings. She’d take them home and plant them in the narrow strip of garden beside their cottage’s front stoop. Even now, all these years later, if Kat closed her eyes and breathed deeply, she could still see her mother’s strong hands sinking into the rich dark earth, a faint faraway smile on her lips that told of a deep and rare contentment.