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What Darkness Brings sscm-8 Page 8


  “This murder is troubling. Most troubling,” said the colonel, smoothing his hand down over his flowing black mustache. His cheeks were full and ruddy, his nose a bulbous, unrefined blob. Despite his uniform and rank, the colonel’s days of active campaigning were now over. He’d grown soft and, Jarvis was beginning to suspect, dangerously timid.

  “Really? I wouldn’t have said so.”

  The Brunswicker’s heavy brows drew together in a frown. “You vould have me believe all is under control?”

  “It is, yes. Although if you show the world that worried face, you will only succeed in focusing attention on that which you wish to conceal, thus bringing about precisely what you would prefer to avoid.”

  “Easy for you to say.” Von Riedesel brought his own brandy to his lips and drained the glass. “It is not you who vill be ruined if the truth gets out.”

  “It won’t get out,” said Jarvis.

  Chapter 16

  The rain was coming down hard by the time Sebastian walked in his front door. “Is Lady Devlin at home?” he asked, handing his hat and gloves to his majordomo, a former gunnery sergeant named Morey.

  “She is, my lord,” said Morey, carefully wiping the moisture from Sebastian’s top hat. “I believe you will find her in the drawing room with an elderly gentleman, one Mr. Benjamin Bloomsfield. I’ve just taken up some tea.”

  “Thank you.”

  Sebastian could hear the low drone of an elderly man’s quavering voice as he mounted the stairs to the first floor.

  “I don’t think you’ll find many in London who are mourning his passing,” he heard the man say.

  “He was a shrewd bargainer?” asked Hero.

  “Shrewd? That’s one word for it.”

  Sebastian could see their visitor now, seated in a chair drawn up beside the hearth. The man was indeed aged, his long flowing beard as white as Eisler’s snowy owl, the bony fingers he held templed before him gnarled with arthritis and palsied with age. He wore an ill-fitting black coat, old-fashioned in cut and somewhat the worse for wear. But his light brown eyes were still sharp with intelligence, the sallow, lined flesh of his face settled into a pattern of gentle good humor that spoke of a life spent laughing at the vicissitudes of fate and the absurdities of his fellow men. No one seeing his scuffed shoes and darned stockings would ever imagine that he was one of the wealthiest men in London, with interests that ranged from banking and shipping to fur, wheat. .

  And diamonds.

  “The truth is that Daniel Eisler was a vicious, unscrupulous scoundrel, and the world is a better place with him out of it.” The old man turned his head as Sebastian paused in the doorway and made a motion as if to push himself out of his chair.

  “No, please, sir, don’t get up,” said Sebastian, going to clasp the old man’s hand. “We’ve never met, Mr. Bloomsfield, but I’ve heard much of your charitable work. It’s an honor to meet you.”

  “The pleasure is mine, young man. I’ve known Miss Jarvis here-excuse me, Lady Devlin, for years now, although I must admit I’d quite despaired of ever seeing her settled with a family of her own. You are to be congratulated for both your good fortune and your good sense.”

  Sebastian glanced over at Hero in time to see a faint flush of color darken her cheeks. Then she looked pointedly away and said with painful politeness, “Would you like some tea, Devlin?”

  He swallowed a smile. “Yes, please.”

  Bloomsfield said, “Your wife tells me you believe this young man the authorities have arrested is innocent.”

  “I do, yes.” A small fire had been kindled to chase away the evening’s growing chill, and Sebastian went to stand before it. “You knew Eisler, did you? I gather he was a widower.”

  Bloomsfield shook his head. “To my knowledge, the man never married. Lived alone for years in that wreck of a house with only two old servants to wait on him.”

  “I’ve seen the house. It’s somewhat overflowing with furniture and art.”

  Bloomsfield huffed a mirthless laugh. “You mean it looks like a glorified pawnshop. Which is essentially what it was.”

  “Do you mean to say Eisler was in the habit of giving loans?” asked Hero, handing Sebastian a cup of tea.

  “I don’t know if I’d call it a habit, exactly. ‘Business’ is more like it. His rates were ruinous and his terms outrageous. He used to insist that his victims-excuse me, his clients-leave several valuable items with him as collateral. Paintings, statues. . even furniture, if it was fine enough.”

  “And gems?”

  “Oh, yes, he was especially fond of gems. Needless to say, very few of his clients ever managed to reclaim their property-even when they paid off their loans.”

  Sebastian took a sip of his tea. “Someone told me there must be any number of people in London who are glad to see Eisler dead. I’m beginning to understand what they meant.”

  Bloomsfield nodded. “I heard recently of a young nobleman who took the family’s emeralds to have them cleaned before presenting them to his new wife, only to discover they were all paste. His mother’d had them copied and hocked the original stones to Eisler to pay her gambling debts. The young marquis threatened Eisler with legal action-they weren’t hers to sell, after all. But in the end he gave it up.”

  “Why?” asked Hero.

  Bloomsfield lifted his shoulders in a shrug. “I never heard. But it’s not unusual. Did you know that more than half the gems in the British Crown Jewels are paste? The originals have been pawned over the years to pay for our various illustrious monarchs’ wars.”

  “Not to mention their mistresses,” said Hero.

  Bloomsfield’s soft brown eyes danced with amusement. “That too.”

  Sebastian said, “I understand Eisler was handling the sale of a large diamond for someone. Did he do that sort of thing? Negotiate the sale of jewels for other people?”

  “Frequently, yes.”

  “Why?” asked Hero. “I mean, I can see why Eisler would do it, since he’d obviously make a fat commission on the transaction. But why wouldn’t a gem’s owner simply sell it openly?”

  “Typically because they don’t want anyone to know that they’re selling. In general, if you hear a collector is selling one or more of his specimens, it’s a fairly good indicator that he’s found himself in financial difficulties. And that’s the kind of information most men don’t care to make common knowledge.”

  “Do you know of any gem collectors who are selling at the moment? Particularly someone with a large blue diamond?”

  Bloomsfield shook his head, although he looked vaguely troubled. “I haven’t heard of anyone, no.”

  “What?” asked Sebastian, watching him.

  “Did you say a large blue diamond?”

  “That’s right. Why?”

  “It’s just. . They’re very rare, you know. The only specimen I can think of that might fit such a description-” He broke off and shook his head again. “No, that’s impossible.”

  “So you do know of such a diamond?”

  The old man leaned forward in his seat, his hands gripping the chair’s arms, a surge of excitement quickening his voice. “I’m not aware of a large blue diamond currently in anyone’s collection. But I do know of such a specimen that was lost. And what is interesting is that it was lost exactly twenty years ago this month. Are you familiar with le diamant bleu de la Couronne?” He glanced from Sebastian to Hero.

  Both shook their heads. “No.”

  “In English it’s known as the ‘French Blue.’ It was once part of the French Crown Jewels. They say it came out of India as an enormous roughly cut triangular stone of over a hundred carats. Louis XIV bought it for the French Crown and had it recut and set, I believe, into a cravat pin.”

  “Must have made a very large cravat pin,” said Hero.

  Bloomsfield’s eyes twinkled. “True. But then, Louis XIV was quite a large man. His successor Louis XV had it remade as the focal point of a magnificent Emblem of the Golden Fleece
.”

  “What happened to it?”

  “It disappeared along with the rest of the French Crown Jewels during the Revolution-the week of 11 September 1792, to be exact. It has never been recovered.”

  “The twenty years is significant,” said Sebastian. “Why?”

  “Because in 1804, Napoleon passed a decree establishing a twenty-year statute of limitations for all crimes committed during the Revolution-although I’ve no doubt the French royal family would dispute the sale of the diamond and claim ownership, if they heard about it.”

  Hero set aside her teacup. “Which would be another good reason for trying to sell the diamond quietly.”

  “True,” said Bloomsfield.

  Thunder rumbled in the distance, growing louder and louder as the wind dashed a driving rain against the drawing room’s windowpanes.

  Sebastian said, “If Eisler were peddling the French Blue, who would the likely buyers be?”

  Bloomfield sat in thoughtful silence for a moment, then dropped his gaze to the fire and blew out a long, troubled breath.

  “Who?” asked Hero, watching him.

  He looked up, his features drawn. “Prinny. That’s who I would try to sell it to, if I were Eisler. The Prince Regent.”

  Chapter 17

  After Bloomsfield’s departure, Sebastian stood with his back to the fire and watched as his wife calmly poured herself another cup of tea. Both her posture and occupation were typically feminine and domestic. Only, he knew there was nothing typical about Hero.

  She set aside the heavy silver pot and reached for a spoon to stir her tea. “I gather it’s the Frenchman Collot from the unsavory Pilgrim in Seven Dials who told you about this mysterious blue diamond?”

  “It was, yes. He claims Eisler was selling the gem for Thomas Hope.”

  She looked up. “Thomas, not Henry Philip?”

  “That’s right. Hope denies it, of course.”

  “But you don’t believe him.”

  Sebastian smiled. “I’m afraid I don’t have a very trusting nature.” He felt his smile harden.

  “There’s something else,” she said, watching him. “What?”

  “Am I so transparent?”

  “At times.”

  He shifted his gaze to the burning coals beside him. “I ran into a man coming out of Hope’s house-a lieutenant in the 114th Foot named Matt Tyson. I knew him in Spain.”

  “I take it he was not exactly one of your boon companions?”

  “He was not. I sat on his court-martial board.”

  “What had he done?”

  “He was accused of murdering a Spanish woman and her two children so that he could steal their gold and jewels. Their throats were slit.”

  “Did he do it?”

  “He claims he did not. He says he happened upon the scene just in time to see another man-an ensign-commit the crime. Unfortunately, since Tyson shot the man dead, the ensign was not in any position to defend himself against the charge. Personally, I think Tyson and the ensign committed the murders together, and then Tyson killed his accomplice when he realized they were about to be discovered by a British patrol.”

  “What makes you think that?”

  “Tyson and I might not have been boon companions, but he and the ensign were.”

  “Ah. Yet Tyson was acquitted?”

  “He was, yes. A sergeant with the riflemen came forward to testify that he heard the woman screaming and then saw Tyson rush into the house in a futile attempt to save her. My fellow officers believed him.”

  “Yet you did not. Why?”

  “The patrol that came upon the murder scene said Tyson was covered with blood; the ensign was not. I think Tyson bribed the sergeant to perjure himself.”

  She took a slow sip of her tea. “What manner of man is he, this Tyson?”

  “About twenty-five, remarkably handsome. He comes from an old, respected family in Hereford. Did well at Eton. On first meeting, he comes off as affable. Engaging. Frankly likeable. But it’s all a carefully calculated facade. Beneath it lies one of the coldest, most brutally self-interested men I’ve ever met.”

  “You think he could be Daniel Eisler’s killer?”

  “I don’t know. There is no doubt in my mind that Matt Tyson is a killer and a thief. But that doesn’t mean he’s necessarily behind this killing and theft.” He hesitated, then said, “Interesting that Mr. Bloomsfield should choose this particular moment to pay you a visit.”

  She set aside her teacup. “Actually, I went to see him this afternoon, but he was out. So technically, he was returning my call.”

  “Ah.” His gaze went beyond her, to where Eisler’s tattered old manuscript lay on the table near the bowed front window. “I take it you showed him the manuscript?”

  “I did. He says it’s called The Key of Solomon and it does indeed appear to be some sort of magic handbook.”

  “So you were right,” said Sebastian, going to pick it up.

  “I was, although I’m afraid poor Mr. Bloomsfield was quite shocked by the contents. He translated a few passages for me, then refused to have anything more to do with it.”

  “Had he heard of it before?”

  She shook her head. “No. But he found an inscription inside the frontpiece that indicates it was copied in Amsterdam. He says it’s written in Sephardic cursive script.” She came to watch as he leafed through the strange text. “I have a friend named Abigail McBean who is something of an expert on these old magic texts. She told me once that they’re called ‘grimoires’ and-” She broke off, her eyes narrowing as he looked up at her and smiled. “What’s so funny?”

  At that, he laughed out loud. She was friends with a motley collection of brilliant, fascinating, and decidedly unfashionable people, from scholars and poets to reformers and artists. She knew geologists and architects, antiquaries and engineers; he should have expected that she’d be acquainted with at least someone whose specialty was ancient magic texts.

  The amusement faded as it occurred to him that there was something decidedly off about a man accepting his wife’s help in his attempts to prove the innocence of his former mistress’s new husband. He said, “You don’t need to be doing this.”

  She reached over to tweak the manuscript from his grasp. “Yes, I do.”

  She started to turn away from the window, the book in her hands, then paused, her gaze on the darkening scene outside.

  The rain had settled into a steady downpour, the clouds hanging dark and low to steal whatever light had been left in the sky. Women with shawls pulled over their heads hurried through the gathering gloom, their pattens clicking, the murky glow from the oil lamps reflecting in a dull gleam off rain-washed paving stones. A landau emblazoned with a coronet and drawn by a matched team of dapple grays dashed past, its spinning red wheels throwing up a fan of water from the gutter to spray over the footpath. It wet the trouser legs of a man standing near the area steps of the house across the street, his slouch hat pulled low over his face. He neither flinched nor moved but simply stood, his gaze fixed on their house.

  “What is it?” Sebastian asked, watching Hero’s expression change.

  “That man. He’s been standing there staring at the house for nearly an hour. I noticed him when I was showing Mr. Bloomsfield the manuscript. We brought it here to the window so that he could catch the last of the daylight and-”

  But Sebastian was already pushing away from the window to stride rapidly toward the door.

  Chapter 18

  Sebastian walked out of the house into a wild wind that threw rain in his face and flapped the tails of his coat. A whip cracked, a shaggy team of shire horses filling the road in front of him so that he had to pull up sharply at the edge of the footpath, swearing impatiently as he ducked around the laden coal wagon. He half expected the slouch-hatted watcher to have disappeared into the mist by the time he reached the far side of the street. But the man was still there, his rain-darkened coat huge on his skeletally thin frame, his mouth p
ulled wide into a madman’s grin as he waited for Sebastian to walk up to him.

  “Who the bloody hell are you and why are you watching my house?” Sebastian demanded, coming to a halt in front of him.

  “It’s funny you should be asking that, you see,” said the man, “because I was wanting to pose the same question to you.”

  His hair was a greasy dark tangle heavily threaded with gray that hung too long around a face with hollowed cheeks and sunken, watery black eyes. At sometime in the distant past, his nose had been badly broken, and a puckered red scar distorted one side of his face. In age he could have been anywhere between thirty-five and fifty, exposure to the elements and ill-health having roughened his skin and dug deep grooves beside his mouth. For a moment, Sebastian thought he looked vaguely familiar; then the haggard face twitched and the impression vanished.

  Sebastian frowned. “What question?”

  “Who are you?”

  “You’re telling me that’s why you’re standing here in the rain? Because you want to know who I am?”

  “It is, yes.”

  The rain poured around them, dimpling the puddle in the gutter at their feet, pinging on the iron railing of the steps that led down to the kitchen, and running in rivulets down the smiling man’s face.

  The man’s grin widened. “She’s a fine-looking woman, your wife. Very fine-looking.”

  A powerful surge of fear-fueled rage coursed through Sebastian. He slammed the man back against the brick wall of the house behind him, one forearm pressed up tight against his skinny throat. “What the devil is that supposed to mean?”

  The man shook his head, his grin still eerily in place. “Didn’t mean nothing by it.”

  “Why the bloody hell do you want to know who I am?”

  The man’s eyes squeezed shut as he gave a strange, half-strangled laugh. “I saw you. Saw you coming out of his house.”