The rum and the fox, p.8

The Rum and The Fox, page 8

 part  #3 of  Regency Romance Mysteries Series

 

The Rum and The Fox
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  

  The grand door opened and a startled-looking butler gave them a look of utter revulsion and began to close it again, clearly not recognising her from their previous meeting. Keziah could hardly blame him, they were soaked to the bone, bloody and bruised, and likely wild-eyed with terror.

  “No!” she screamed, pushing at the door to stop him. “I must see Ash!” The man started at the familiar use of the duke’s nickname and she corrected herself. “Lord Ashwicke instructed me to come here if I was in danger, and I am … Please, please,” she begged. “I am Lady Keziah Todd, Lord Todd’s daughter.”

  Whether out of shock or because he was convinced by their words, as he still seemed not to know who she was, the man stepped back. Keziah, who had been braced against the closing door, fell into the imposing foyer, landing on her knees on the cold, marble floor.

  Chapter 9

  A smell-powder - a duellist, whether a good shot or not

  - The 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, by Francis Grose.

  “What the devil …” came a familiar voice from the stairs and Keziah looked up to see the dawning horror on Ash’s face as he recognised the shabby bundle on the floor of his home.

  “Lady Todd!”

  He was beside her in an instant and a strong arm helped her up while the butler roused himself to help poor Molly, obviously realising she’s spoken truthfully of his master’s instructions.

  Once she was standing, Ash just stared at her, the horror in his eyes giving her a perfect picture of how she must look. To her horror, her eyes began to fill and a sob tore at her throat.

  “Oh, my dear,” Ash said, such tenderness in his voice that she was quite undone. Before she knew what had happened, she was swept from her feet and was being carried up the stairs. This was startling for many reasons, not least of which being that she’d had no idea he was strong enough to do so. The realisation was somehow reassuring, and she allowed herself to relax against him as exhaustion swept over her in a heavy wave. Behind her, she saw the butler, Grant, bearing Molly in much the same fashion, though his expression was rather less tender. Relieved that they were safe, for now, at least, she laid her head on Ash’s shoulder as he barked instructions to his staff, from sending for a doctor, drawing her a hot bath, and bringing brandy immediately.

  He kicked open a bedroom door and carried her in, laying her on the bed with such care she thought she might well begin to cry again. Sitting down beside her, he took her hand; she realised he was white faced, though what emotion lay behind it, she was not entirely sure.

  “You are quite safe now,” he said, reaching out and touching her face with such reverence that she felt her lip tremble. “No one will ever harm you again, you have my word. I won’t allow it.”

  She nodded, trying to smile at the assurance in his voice, but finding her lip was cut and swollen and it hurt to do so.

  “Can you tell me, who did this?” The words were soft and quietly spoken as was usual for the duke, yet there was such restrained anger behind them that she looked at him with more care, and realised he was trembling also.

  “M-my father,” she said, staring at him and feeling suddenly afraid for what he meant to do. She watched him nod, his lips compressed into a thin, grim line.

  “My people will take care of you,” he said, holding her hand between both of his and then raising it to his lips. He kissed the fingers, not looking at her. “There is a doctor coming to tend you, and then I beg that you will rest and recover your strength. I will take care of everything, so there is I no need to worry.”

  Quite naturally, these words had the opposite effect, and Keziah sat up, clutching at his hand as fear for him squeezed at her heart.

  “What do you mean to do?” she demanded, but at that moment there was a knock at the door, and on Ash’s instruction, an army of servants bustled in, bearing a copper bath and containers of hot water.

  “Don’t worry,” he said, nodding at the doctor as he too entered the room, and Keziah was stopped from saying anything further.

  “My Lord,” she cried, agitation at what his intentions were making her breathing too fast and her heart beat erratically. She got to her feet in a rush, and this, it seemed, was too much for her abused body, as the world spun and tilted, and she knew no more.

  ***

  Ash leapt forward and caught Lady Todd as she fainted. Lifting her, he noted once again how little she weighed, how slender her limbs were. The idea that her father had half-starved her for months while he played at deception, and then compounded his cruelty with such violence, made rage such as he had never known explode in his chest.

  He had never known real anger, nor hatred, but now those emotions flooded him, the white hot heat of his fury seething in his blood. Once he was satisfied that his lady was in good hands and there was nothing further that he could do, he left the room, closing the door behind him.

  He hardly knew what he was doing as he went to his study and sought out the pistols that they’d practised with just earlier that day. He cursed himself as he opened the box and set about loading them. He should have insisted that she be placed under his protection the moment he’d heard her story. He should not have taken no for an answer, and this was the result of him not having the backbone to insist on what he knew to be right. Well, no more. The lady was under his protection, and God help anyone who tried to hurt her or in any way damage her reputation because of it.

  But first, he must face Lord Todd.

  Ash felt strangely calm about the prospect all at once, and his hands were steady as he shrugged into his greatcoat with help from Grant before returning to his study to conceal the pistols, one in each of the coat’s deep pockets.

  He set off into the evening, puddles glinting in the lamplight reflected at his feet. The storm had passed, at least, leaving the cobbles slick, and those glittering pools of water were studding the dirty streets, soaking you to your ankles if you didn’t watch your step. The sky was full dark now and the fashionable people abroad, those who were attending the various assemblies and routs and any other number of amusements to be found in Bath.

  Ash pulled his hat down low over his head and huddled into the collar of his coat, not wanting to be delayed by anyone recognising him. His strode out, pushing past people in his determination to deal with the vermin who had hurt Lady Todd, a young lady who had been occupying his mind rather too much of late.

  Though he knew he was not the kind of man she desired - her impatience at his poor skills in most manly arenas were illustration enough of that fact - his poor heart was deaf to his mind’s instructions. No matter how he told himself that she was nothing but a friend, and that she’d only come to him out of a sense of honour and fear for his safety, he could not help but spend his time away from her daydreaming like some lovesick moon calf. Too many hours had been spent remembering the elegant curve of her neck, the profound blue of her eyes, and the way her face lit up on those rare occasions that he caused a smile to dawn on those sweet, soft lips.

  Now, however, he remembered how bloody and swollen those lips had been tonight, how her cheek was red with the imprint of a violent hand that should have only been raised in her defence, how battered and bruised she’d been, but more than that, the fear in her eyes. It had torn at his heart to see her forthright and indomitable spirit so very afraid that even his inadequate presence had reassured her.

  The blind fury that had swallowed him whole on hearing her father’s hand was responsible glittered like a flare behind his eyes and he strode on, night-blind to everything around him, but determined.

  He might not be the hero she wanted or needed, but he was all she had, and so he’d do everything in his power to live up to that role.

  Bath was busy with the great and the good, the drunk and the down-at-heel. Avoiding the busier thoroughfares, he hugged the shadows, barging anyone who was foolish enough to delay him out of his way without a backwards glance. He strode by the Abbey, wondering if God was watching his progress and if he would be damned to hell for his actions. The idea did not trouble him unduly, so long as he sent Todd ahead of him.

  By the time he reached Abbey Green, his heart was thudding, his breathing coming fast but with a feeling of certainty that he must do this. He kept his head down, hardly seeing where he was going, and he started in shock as a small boy ploughed into him, the two of them colliding with some force.

  “Sorry mister!” the lad called, righting himself and hurrying on. Ash grunted and moved on, too distracted to care in the least. Finally the house was in front of him, and he made his way to the door of the building he’d visited such a short time ago. Hurrying up to the house, he paused as he realised the front door hung open. As it opened directly onto the street, this seemed rather odd, and Ash pushed it a little.

  The door swung open with no protest to reveal the interior of the house shrouded in darkness. Ash swallowed; his skin was clammy, sweaty, and prickly, and his chest tight as he took a breath, laying his hand on one of the pistols, before stepping inside.

  The house was quiet, the dark absolute, and Ash put his other hand out in front of him to search for obstacles as he withdrew the pistol from his pocket. Pausing once more he listened for any sound, but heard nothing past the pounding of his own blood in his veins. He fully cocked the gun, the quiet sound of the sear engaging the tumbler sounding like a gunshot itself in the unnerving silence of the still house.

  Ash held his breath, but still nothing stirred.

  He moved a little farther into the darkness, wishing he had the stealth of a cat, and, as he didn’t, praying he wouldn’t walk in anything, at least. He froze as a sound at the end of the corridor rooted him to the spot, and only breathed again as a real cat ran down the stairs to the lower floor.

  Closing his eyes in silent prayer for a moment, Ash moved on, sliding along the corridor wall until an open door presented itself. This was the parlour where he had first laid eyes on Lady Todd, what seemed a lifetime ago in this moment.

  Moving with caution, he stepped into the room and felt his heart explode in his chest as a white flash lit the room, briefly illuminating a shadowy figure by the fireplace with an explosion of sound, before the room was plunged once more into darkness.

  For that brief second, Ash felt that time had slowed. The report of the pistol, the thud of the bullet burying itself into the door jamb beside his shoulder, far too close, and the prick of a splinter as it stabbed at his neck, all of these things were registered and inventoried. At the same moment, his hand raised his own pistol and pulled back the trigger, and this time the sound was deafening, ringing in his ears as his heart sped in his chest.

  As the sound faded away, he heard the figure stumble and crash to the floor, and Ash knew he’d hit his mark.

  Horror and shock and relief, he wasn’t sure which was most prevalent but he thought he heard shouts in the distance, and knew he must run before he was discovered. Stumbling and crashing into the furniture he’d so carefully avoided on arrival, he ran through the front door, pulling it shut behind him and taking care to pull his hat over his eyes as he went, keeping his head well down.

  The next, sickening moments were a blur as he retraced his steps, walking fast now and trying not to run when all he wanted to do was take to his heels. But he must do nothing to provoke undue attention. It might be harder to hang a duke than a common man, but that wasn’t to say it couldn’t happen, and he was damned if he’d make it easy for them.

  Nonetheless, he couldn’t regret it.

  Lady Todd was safe and so was his mother; that was worth any price to keep a monster like Viscount Rennard from their doors.

  ***

  Keziah submitted to the doctor’s examination, too exhausted to protest. Her mind seemed hazy, her thoughts a jumble of violent images and fear, and Ash’s green eyes wide with concern and yet with that flash of fury that had made her heart jump with anxiety. She tried to protest as the doctor made her drink some strange-tasting concoction, and realised too late that it was a sleeping draught. While she was still conscious enough to do so, she caught at the doctor’s sleeve, begging that his grace be sent to her immediately. The disapproval in the doctor’s face was clear enough at the impropriety of her demand, and her garbled explanations of her fears for him fell on deaf ears.

  She was told that she must rest now, that her maid had been cared for likewise. Her poor abigail had suffered a broken wrist, which should heal with no problems, at least, and was well and in good spirits, despite a number of nasty bruises.

  With this, Keziah had to be satisfied as the drug tugged her anxious thoughts into the dark and away from all of her troubles.

  Chapter 10

  A bugaboe - A sheriff’s officer

  - The 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, by Francis Grose.

  Constable Greenly regarded the man before him with an air of deep suspicion. The intelligence just put into his hands was undoubtedly something that his superior would want to be informed of immediately. Yet having had the misfortune as to wake Inspector Formby in the early hours of the morning on a previous occasion with what turned out to be a wild goose chase, Greenly decided that a bit of caution and a little more information was required.

  “How d’you know ‘e’s dead?” Greenly demanded, narrowing his eyes at the rather gaunt man before him.

  “Well, the bloody great hole in his chest was something of a giveaway,” the fellow before him replied, deadpan.

  “’Ere, don’t you get cheeky with me,” Greenly replied, with as much patience as anyone was entitled to past midnight. “It’s me who’ll ‘ave to go an’ wake the inspector, and I want to know the bloke is good and dead afore I trouble meself to do so.”

  “He’s dead, all right,” the man said, glowering at him and looking none too pleased about it either.

  “Well, that’s all right then,” Greenly said, with dignity, and went away to wake his superior.

  ***

  Mr Formby stared down at the crumpled figure of Viscount Rennard and felt none of the satisfaction his sergeant might have expected him to feel. That a violent and unpleasant man had been removed from the society was certainly something he could find pleasure in, but that he had not been the instrument of its coming about … that rankled.

  The man was slumped in front of the fireplace and the cause of death only too apparent. Formby inspected the body and looked around the room for the fifth time, his greying brows drawn together so hard that his eyes felt the weight of them. He sighed and relaxed his face, rubbing his eyes with his fingers and then looking up as young Greenly came in.

  “Well?” Formby demanded.

  “According to Mrs Richards next door, shots were heard around nine thirty, sir,” Greenly said, looking down at a notebook. “She’s keen to tell me that she don’t stick her nose into anyone else’s affairs, though, and wouldn’t say much. Strict religious, she is,” the constable added, looking a little uncomfortable. “Kept quoting scriptures at me, and seemed to think Lord Todd was a devilish fellow. Live by the sword, die by the sword; blimey, if she said it once, she said it ten times.” Greenly rolled his eyes, but the inspector nodded in agreement.

  “I’m with her on that one,” he said with a snort.

  The constable rubbed the back of his neck, staring back at his notes. “Only other thing I could get from her was that she saw two women running from the house a half hour or so before the shots were fired. And I have three witnesses that saw a man hurrying away from the house, though one of them’s a tad bosky, to say the least,” he added with a frown.

  “Description?”

  Greenly gave him a look of disgust and shrugged. “Not much to go on. Great coat with a fair few capes, and a hat obscured his face. Average height. They thought he was a young fellow on account of the way he moved, but nothing further than that as yet.”

  Formby nodded.

  “Next of kin?” he said, feeling the frown settle on his face once more as he looked down on the late viscount’s mortal remains.

  “Yes, sir, the daughter I told you about. Apparently she’s missing, along with her maid. Mrs Richards said she couldn’t swear it was them running from the house earlier in evening, as she only saw their backs, but she thought it likely.”

  Formby nodded. “I want her found immediately, get onto it.” That line of enquiry was bound to be fruitful. “Anyone else work here?”

  “Only the fellow what reported the murder, sir,” Greenly said, flicking back through his notebook; “Chap by the name of Snyder, Martin Snyder. The late Lord Todd’s valet, by all accounts. Said he was asleep in his bed, as Todd had dismissed him for the evening, but came down when he heard the shots. Though ‘e’s a right shifty devil, if you ask me.”

  “And I’ll be sure to do so, if I want your opinion,” Formby replied, his tone dry. His constable grew a little red about the ears before giving a stiff nod and retreating, leaving the inspector to cogitate in peace.

  He remembered the names and faces of people who had fallen foul of Rennard in the past, and wondered if any of them were capable of such an act. There were a number of people to consider, that was for certain, though to his knowledge none of them were in Bath at this moment, but that would need a thorough investigation.

  The fact was, a man like the viscount could have any number of enemies, though the daughter had to be a suspect if she’d run like she had. Just because she’d left didn’t mean she hadn’t come back again. He hoped that wasn’t the case, as he had little difficulty in imagining what her life had been with such a father. Though, of course, she could be every bit as black-hearted and ruthless as her sire. He’d seen enough of the world not to believe a woman couldn’t commit a crime, even one as bloody as murder. The fairer sex could be every bit as formidable as any man.

  Nonetheless, Mr Formby could only hope that whoever had done it had a rock solid alibi or was as black hearted as his victim, as right now he felt more like shaking the man’s hand than stringing him up.

 

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183