Read Reckless Rules (Brambridge Novel 4) Online
Authors: Pearl Darling
Tags: #Historical, #Romance, #Fiction, #Regency, #Victorian, #London Society, #England, #Britain, #19th Century, #Adult, #Forever Love, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Hearts Desire, #Series, #Brambridge, #British Government, #Military, #Secret Investigator, #Deceased Husband, #Widow, #Mission, #War Office, #Romantic Suspense
“Sorry, Eustacia.” Victoria raised her voice but didn’t bellow this time.
“So. You want to know about Ponsonby Butterworth?”
Victoria nodded.
“It’s a name I haven’t heard in a while. But it will cost you.” Eustacia smiled and her eyes glinted brighter. “As my dear departed cousin would say.”
Victoria nodded. Eustacia was the only one who probably had an inkling of what Lord Colchester, her cousin, had been like. Eustacia had once told Victoria that ‘dear Augustus’ had tried to blackmail her when he was in his mid-thirties, and she was in her twenties. She had given him a good talking to about some of the things that she could blackmail him about and he had apparently given up very quickly. Victoria opened her ever handy pelisse and rooted around at the bottom for the parcel wrapped in brown paper. Drawing it out, she handed it to Eustacia with a wink.
“Ah good. I think we should have these now. Did you bring any clippers with you? I can’t leave things like that lying around without people seeing them. I might be living in Stockwell but I still have my standards.”
Victoria nodded and pulled out a weighty silver square from her bag. Eustacia ripped into the brown paper with gusto and drew out two fragrant cigars that had come from Victoria’s secret drawer.
“Ah,” said Eustacia appreciatively. “I’ve given orders for us not to be disturbed. I can trust Millie, though. She doesn’t care what I do.”
“I know, I found her for you.”
“And jolly good job you did too. Without you supporting me, I would be living in a hovel in Banbury now.”
Victoria shrugged. It was the least she could do for Lord Colchester’s relatives, and she liked Eustacia; it made the spending more palatable. She cut the end of both cigars with the silver clippers and handed them to Eustacia.
With a trembling hand, Eustacia stuck both cigars in her mouth and lit them both at the same time. She inhaled expertly and, taking them out, blew a smoke ring that soared to the ceiling. Nodding, she handed back a cigar to Victoria. “As perfect as ever, thank you Victoria.”
“They’re good, aren’t they?” Victoria said with a smile. “I’ve changed suppliers recently. These are said to have been imported from Cuba.”
“They are certainly more fragrant,” Eustacia said with a frown, “it makes a difference knowing they were rolled in Spitalfields.”
“That’s what I thought. Carruthers thought I might be interested.”
“Good man, that Carruthers. If only I’d had a butler like that—”
“Tell me about Ponsonby Butterworth,” Victoria said hurriedly. That was the only thing about talking to Eustacia. She was easily distracted onto the most esoteric topics.
Eustacia took a large puff at her cigar and blew another smoke ring at the ceiling. “You must remember I didn’t see cousin Augustus very much in the early years.”
Victoria nodded, she knew this already. “He was in training to be Lord Colchester as the heir presumptive, the Colchesters never being a very fertile lot, and the peerage was being passed to him by a long removed great uncle. I was just a poor cousin who lived in the country.”
“Hence his original name of Augustus Ballington.”
“Yes. Now I am the last of the Ballingtons.” Eustacia pursed her lips, but brightened again. “Anyway, the thing about Augustus was, that he was always in the company of a friend Ponsonby Butterworth.”
“Gosh, what a mouthful.”
“Yes. My friends and I used to call him Poisonby Butterworth. He was overtly charming, but one couldn’t help feeling as though he was watching you at the oddest moments.”
“Do you know if he had a brother?”
“Yes. Paul Butterworth. I think his parents had slightly lower ambitions for him, given his name. He really was a piece of work. I remember Poisonby joking that his brother was around and people should watch out for their belongings.”
“What an awful family.”
Eustacia nodded vigorously. “It’s why I couldn’t understand Augustus’ fascination with Poisonby, apart from the fact that superficially they looked fairly similar.”
“Gosh, I wonder why Lord Colchester never spoke of him.”
“Probably the trauma.”
“
Trauma
?”
“Of course. Wouldn’t you feel a little shocked if your best friend died suddenly at the ripe age of thirty two from a gunshot wound to the head?”
“Goodness.” Victoria took a hasty pull from her cigar and knocked the long length of ash that had gathered into a small tray on the table next to her. Ponsonby Ballington was dead and yet his brother,
Paul,
who now called himself Mr. Durnish, and yet who didn’t look old enough to be sixty-whatever, was looking for him.
“Indeed. And the funny thing is, no one was charged with the crime. Poor old Augustus became a recluse for the year. Wouldn’t allow anyone to see him. Only emerged when it turned out his great uncle had died and he ascended to the title. He aged ten years in the short time.”
“Shocking!”
Eustacia giggled and held her cigar aloft. “Undoubtedly for him. His hair had turned all white.”
“Did you see him much?”
“No, not after that. Mind I had never seen him much beforehand. I wanted to tell him when my parents had died.” Eustacia frowned. “But he refused to see me. He said he was terribly sorry, and that he felt for me, and would I like this house in Stockwell? It felt like he was buying me off in some sort of way, but I didn’t mind much. A house in Stockwell was not to be sneezed at.”
“Yes. I only found about the house when I went through his papers.”
“And that was when we met,” Eustacia said. “Did you think I was his mistress?”
Victoria thought for a few seconds about her dead husband’s generally odd behavior. “Mmm, not as such, but I was intrigued.”
“Good girl.”
“So, err, what happened to Ponsonby Butterworth’s remains?” Victoria had to have something to tell Mr. Durnish just in case he hadn’t been aware of his brother’s death, unlikely as it sounded.
“Oh, his parents buried him, I think. Closed casket obviously, given the gunshot wound. It was fairly quick. His brother came home on leave—he had just enrolled in the navy, and was about to leave for the continent. The whole of Banbury was agog. I don’t think poor old Poisonby would have expected so many mourners at his funeral. Getting shot in the head pushed the numbers up markedly.”
“Eustacia! You can’t say that.”
“I can say what I like, Victoria. I’m nearing that time when I’ll go, and certainly apart from yourself and perhaps Millie, I don’t expect anyone else at my departing.”
“Gosh.” Victoria was not sure how to respond to Eustacia’s brutal assessment. It was a sobering thought. Victoria was uncomfortably aware that apart from her brother and her friend Agatha, that her own funeral too might not be that well attended, apart from the usual members of the ton that liked to gape at the expected ceremony of the occasion. “Eustacia, do you mind me asking you something personal?”
“Good Lord girl, not at all. What is it?”
“Would you have liked to have had a husband?”
“Hmm, you mean one more potential person at my funeral?”
“I’m not sure I quite meant it—”
“Yes, I would. But it didn’t happen for me. That’s what Augustus tried to blackmail me about. There was a man… but, oh well. There you go.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be. I must admit it would have been nice to have shared some of the things in life with someone. I have been quite lonely at times. But I’ve kept it at bay.”
Victoria nodded. She knew all about keeping things at bay. “I’ve taken up a lot of your time.”
“Nonsense. It’s nice to reminisce. Why I remember old Poisonby and Augustus tricking me once. We were at a ball and they came in wearing each other’s clothes. I couldn’t tell who was who, especially when it came to marking my dance card.”
Victoria took a deep pull at her own cigar and settled back. Eustacia was off again on a tangent. She would spend half an hour more with her and then get back to Colchester Mansions. She needed to update Carruthers, get him to ride to Banbury and make a copy of Ponsonby Butterworth’s death record and close the Durnish case. She didn’t want to deal with whoever it was any further.
Although Durnish’s name did keep appearing in the disappearance of all these young girls.
Victoria was desperate for a restorative cup of tea when she arrived back at Colchester Mansions. The traffic on the London streets was becoming more and more dense as the spring turned into summer. Omnibuses and coffin cabs proliferated, causing hold ups in the most unlikely of places. She regretted the impulse of buying her white open barouche now. It had seemed at the time a good way of getting rid of money and keeping up with her image of a fashionable woman. It didn’t shield her from the stink of the city, or the stares of those less fortunate.
Carruthers greeted her with an apprehensive expression. “Miss Fanthorpe is in the drawing room, my lady,” he intoned in his best butlering voice. Victoria groaned.
“Tea please, Carruthers.”
He nodded and disappeared in the direction of the kitchens. Victoria pulled off the small cockade hat that she was wearing and tossed it onto the hall table along with her pelisse. Without giving herself time to reflect, she walked briskly into the drawing room.
“Dear Miss Fanthorpe, how lovely to see you.”
Miss Fanthorpe sniffed. “It’s alright, you can drop the act, Lady Colchester. I must admit I was taken in at first, but Guthers sent me on the right track.” Miss Fanthorpe sniffed again. “I say, have you been gambling or something?”
Victoria frowned. Whatever had led her to think that? “No, of course not. I may not be the ninny that you thought I was, but I certainly do not gamble.”
With money. Other things perhaps though.
“I thought I caught a waft of cigar smoke.” Miss Fanthorpe glanced at an open window. “It must be coming from outside.”
“I did see a gentleman walking down the street smoking when I arrived back,” Victoria said hurriedly. Damn Eustacia and her smoke rings.
“Oh that must be it. I was just visiting to catch up on Mr. Cryne. He’s proposed and father is expecting me to give him an answer.”
“My congratulations,” Victoria murmured.
Miss Fanthorpe flapped an arm. “If it wasn’t expected of me, and if Father didn’t want me to do it, I wouldn’t. Don’t see the point in having a man just so that he can prop you up socially and spend your money. Of course most of the time it is the other way round. I can understand that.” Miss Fanthorpe stopped and put a hand to her mouth. “Begging your pardon, Lady Colchester.”
Victoria yawned. “No offence taken, Miss Fanthorpe. Now then, as regards Mr. Cryne…” Victoria paused. She
had
received more information on Mr. Cryne from Carruthers. What had he said? A leopard can’t change his spots. She pursed her lips. All she could do was to relay the facts. Passing on her butler’s observations would be prejudicial and sway Miss Fanthorpe’s mind unnecessarily. But then there was the cryptic entry from the book of secrets too—but that surely had to be about the older Mr. Cryne, not the one who was currently dangling after Miss Fanthorpe.
“I would like everything, warts and all,” Miss Fanthorpe said into the lengthening silence. “I can tell you are holding something back, like you did last time. It can’t be very good for business to hide information from your clients, you know.”
Really, Rosa Fanthorpe was too clever for her own good. “I have made some enquiries.”
Miss Fanthorpe nodded impatiently. “Yes, yes, do go on.”
“I understand that Mr. Cryne has a predilection for high steppers.”
“Just like many men.”
“But that he hasn’t been seen with anybody recently.”
“Good for…” Miss Fanthorpe caught the look on Victoria’s face. “Me?”
“Someone I know.” Victoria paused; there wasn’t any other way to phrase it. “Someone I am quite close to, said that a leopard doesn’t change its spots.”
“Oh.”
“Yes.”
“Um.”
“Yes?”
“You couldn’t quite, explain that for me could you?”
“I think what my acquaintance was trying to say was that if a man liked variety, he would continue to seek variety, and just because there was no evidence of any activity, it doesn’t mean to say that it is not going on.”
“Oh.”
“Yes.”
“So you don’t think that I could have taken away any of his desire to seek the company of these… high steppers?” Miss Fanthorpe finished in a very quiet voice, her normally domineering tone absent.
Victoria softened her own voice. “I’m not sure any woman could capture this type of man’s attention for long, no matter how beautiful–or rich–they are.”
“Was Lord Colchester like that?” Miss Fanthorpe asked curiously.
Victoria rolled her eyes. Here she was trying to be tactful for Miss Fanthorpe when in reality the girl was as hard as a rock.
“Lord Colchester was entirely different.” True, but not in the way people expected.
“You were very lucky.”
Now the chit was trying to probe into her relationship. If she was going to play at that game...
“You might as well know that outside of the six months’ time frame you allotted me, Mr. Cryne also sent the new Lady Beauregard a note of the most salacious nature suggesting all sorts of unmentionable things that he would like to enact with her.”
Miss Fanthorpe gasped. “That can’t be right. I have allowed for everything that you have said to me until now, but really, that is beyond the pale.” The girl’s gaze sharpened. “You aren’t jealous, are you? I saw you dancing with Mr. Cryne at that ball. He was talking in a very animated way to you.”
Really, Miss Fanthorpe was getting beyond annoying now. “I think if you do not need my services any longer, you may leave.”
“But Lady Colchester—”
“Please do not bother to pay the bill. I will make sure I make my own contribution to the selected charity.”
“I—”
“Carruthers? Miss Fanthorpe was just leaving.”
Carruthers appeared at the door as if he had been waiting to come in. He was at his most imposing. He held the door open whilst Miss Fanthorpe sat in her chair immobile for a few seconds.