Read The Mayfair Affair Online
Authors: Tracy Grant
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Regency, #Historical, #Historical mystery, #Historical Romance, #Romance, #Regency Romance, #19th_century_setting, #19th_Century, #historical mystery series, #Suspense, #Historical Suspense
This ebook is licensed to you for your personal enjoyment only.
This ebook may not be sold, shared, or given away.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the writer’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
The Mayfair Affair
Copyright © 2015 by Tracy Grant
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
No part of this work may be used, reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without prior permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
NYLA Publishing
350 7
th
Avenue, Suite 2003, NY 10001, New York.
For Nancy Yost, a wonderful agent, friend, and literary advisor
thank you for always being there for me – not to mention for Malcolm and Suzanne
My heartfelt thanks to my agent, Nancy Yost, for her input and advice on this book and from the start of the series.
Thanks as well to Natanya Wheeler, for a beautiful cover that evokes the mood of the book and series and looks about as close as I can imagine to Suzanne Rannoch, and also for shepherding the ebook expertly through the publication process. Thanks to Sarah Younger for looking after the book so well on the print side. And to Adrienne Rosado and everyone at NYLA for their support throughout the publication process.
Thank you to Catherine Duthie for the invaluable feedback on the manuscript. To Eve Lynch for the careful copy editing and countless emails saying "Did you really mean this?", "Is a period word?", "Did you really mean this character's name to change mid-book?"
To all the wonderful booksellers who help readers find Malcolm and Suzanne, and in particular to Book Passage in Corte Madera, for their always warm welcome to me and to my daughter, Mélanie. Thank you to the readers who share Suzanne's and Malcolm's adventures with me on my Web site and Facebook and Twitter. Thank you to Gregory Paris and jim saliba for creating my Web site and updating it so quickly and with such style. To Raphael Coffey for juggling cats and baby to take the best author photos a writer could have. To Bonnie Glaser, for always asking about my writing, and to Bonnie, Raphael, and Veronica Wolff for nurturing Mélanie so Mummy could get a few more words down. To Alexandra Elliott for taking such good care of Mélanie and encouraging her imagination and also sharing writer talk with her mother. To my colleagues at the Merola Opera Program for understanding that being a novelist is also an important part of my life and to the 2014 Merola program for a fabulous production of
Don Giovanni
that inspired key scenes in this book. To the staffs at Pottery Barn Kids, Peek, and Blue Stove at Nodstrom, all at The Village in Corte Madera, for a friendly welcome to Mélanie and me on writing breaks. And to the staff at Peet's Coffee & Tea at The Village in Corte Madera for keeping me supplied with superb lattes and cups of Earl Grey and keeping Mélanie happy with hot chocolate and whip cream and smiles as I wrote this book.
Thank you to Lauren Willig for sharing the delights and dilemmas of writing about Napoleonic spies while also juggling small children. To Penelope Williamson for support and understanding and hours analyzing Shakespeare plays, not to mention episodes of
Scanda
l. To Veronica Wolff for wonderful writing dates during which my word count seemed to magically increase. To Deborah Crombie for supporting Malcolm and Suzanne from the beginning. To Tasha Alexander and Andrew Grant for their wit and wisdom and support, whether in person or via email. To Deanna Raybourn, who never fails to offer encouragement and asks wonderful interview questions. And to my other writer friends near and far for brainstorming, strategizing, and commiserating--Jami Alden, Bella Andre, Isobel Carr (who's been asking for this book for some time), Catherine Coulter, Barbara Freethy, Carol Grace, C. S. Harris, Candice Hern, Anne Mallory, Monica McCarty, and Poppy Reiffin.
Finally, thank you to my daughter, Mélanie, for inspiring me, encouraging me, and being amazingly tolerant of Mummy's writing time.
*indicates real historical figures
The Rannoch Household
Malcolm Rannoch, Member of Parliament
Suzanne Rannoch, his wife
Colin Rannoch, their son
Jessica Rannoch, their daughter
Laura Dudley, Colin and Jessica's governess
Blanca Mendoza, Suzanne's companion
Miles Addison, Malcolm's valet
Valentin, their footman
The Davenport Family
Colonel Harry Davenport
Lady Cordelia Davenport, his wife
Livia Davenport, their daughter
Drusilla Davenport, their daughter
Archibald Davenport, Harry's uncle
Lydia Cranley, Harry's cousin
The Mallinson/Carfax Family
Hubert Mallinson, Earl Carfax, British spymaster
Amelia, Countess Carfax, his wife
Lady Lucinda Mallinson, their youngest daughter
David Mallinson, Viscount Worsley, the Carfaxes' son
Simon Tanner, playwright, David's lover
Louisa, Viscountess Craven, the Carfaxes' daughter
Viscount Craven, her husband
Lady Isobel Lydgate, the Carfaxes' daughter
Oliver Lydgate, her husband
The Fitzwalter/Trenchard Family
John Fitzwalter, Duke of Trenchard
Mary Fitzwalter, Duchess of Trenchard, Trenchard's wife and the Cafaxes' daughter
James Fitzwalter, Trenchard's son
Henrietta Fitzwalter, James's wife
Jack Fitzwalter, Marquis of Tarrington, Trenchard's eldest son (deceased)
Jane Hampson Fitzwalter, Marchioness of Tarrington, Jack's wife (deceased)
Colonel Frederick Hampson, Jane's father
Sarah Hampson, Frederick's wife
Lily Duval, Jack's mistress
Johnny Duval, Lily and Jack's son
The Laclos/Caruthers Family
Gui Laclos, French émigré
Gabrielle, Viscountess Caruthers, his sister
Rupert, Viscount Caruthers, her husbnad
Betrand Laclos, Gui's cousin, Rupert's lover
Others
Jeremy Roth, Bow Street runner
Raoul O'Roarke, French spymaster
Theodore Hawkins, the Trenchard family solicitor
Adolphus Molton, retired merchant
Sally Molton, his wife
Miss Simpkins, head mistress of the Muschison School
*Lord Sidmouth, home secretary
*Sir Nathaniel Conant, chief magistrate of Bow Street
*Robert Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool, prime minister
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no; it is an ever-fixed mark,
That looks on tempests, and is never shaken
Shakespeare, "Sonnet 116"
London
March 1818
Rifle fire peppered the air. Malcolm Rannoch came awake with a jerk and tightened his grip on his wife. Suzanne froze in his arms, then sat bolt upright in a tangle of Irish linen sheets and embroidered Portuguese satin coverlet, her hair spilling over his arm. Another hail of bullets. One rifle. No, not a rifle. Rapping. On the stout English oak of the door panels.
"I'm sorry, sir. Madam." It was Valentin, their footman, outside the door. "But Inspector Roth is below."
Malcolm pushed back the coverlet, letting in a blast of chill air. "Dressing gown," Suzanne said, which was sensible, as he wasn't wearing a nightshirt. He grabbed his dressing gown from the bench at the foot of the bed and struggled into it. By the time he got to the door, Suzanne was beside him, tugging at the sash on her own dressing gown.
Valentin's young, fine-boned face was white above the flame of his candle. "Mr. Roth didn't say what the trouble was. But he insisted I wake you. I thought—"
"Yes." Malcolm touched him on the shoulder. "Quite right. Thank you, Valentin."
He met his wife's gaze for a moment. A dozen possibilities, each more unpleasant than the last, hovered between them. "Best to know at once," Suzanne said.
But before they went downstairs they moved to the cradle where Jessica, fifteen months, was sharing her pillow with the family cat, then opened the connecting door to the night nursery. The tin-shaded night light showed Colin, four and a half, tangled in the coverlet, his arm round his stuffed bear. Malcolm heard Suzanne give a sigh of relief he thought only he could have detected. He took her hand, only in part because the house was shrouded in darkness.
The light of his candle jumped and leapt over the stair wall and the curving balustrade as they made their way downstairs. In the ground floor hall, cloud-filtered moonlight spilled through the fanlight over the front door, casting a cool wash of light over the long-case clock, the velvet-covered bench, the hall table with its basket for calling cards. The marble tiles were cold underfoot. When they were close enough to see the dial, the long-case clock said that it was twenty-five minutes past four. Jeremy Roth, now a Bow Street runner, had become a close friend when he was an army sergeant in the Peninsula during the war, but even their closest friends weren't in the habit of making calls at this hour.
A visit from a Bow Street runner could not but raise a host of unpleasant possibilities. Given the revelations that had recently shaken their marriage, the possibilities reverberated through the air like a cannonade that warns of a coming battle. Outside the carved library doors, Suzanne met Malcolm's gaze for a moment. Malcolm could see the jolt of terror in the eyes of his usually imperturbable wife, the fear that whatever news Roth had brought would rend the fragile rapprochement between them.
Suzanne gave the bright smile with which Malcolm had seen her face down every crisis from the Battle of Waterloo to an attack on their house when she was about to give birth. "Best see what Jeremy has to say."
Malcolm nodded and reached for the door handle.
Roth was pacing before the banked coals of the library fireplace, mud-spattered greatcoat whipping about his ankles. He turned at the opening of the double doors and came quickly forwards. The sharp-featured face that Malcolm had seen alight with compassion as Roth closed the eyes of a fallen comrade, and intent with the chase as he raced down a London alley after a suspect, was now set, the mobile features folded into severe lines, the eyes oddly hooded.
"I'm sorry," Roth said. "But this couldn't wait."
"It's hardly the first time we've been awakened in the middle of the night. And I doubt it will be the last." Suzanne gestured Roth to a chair, as though she wore a morning dress with every hook done up, her hair dressed, and all the accoutrements in place instead of being wrapped in seafoam silk and ivory lace with her feet bare and her dark hair spilling in a tangle over her shoulders.
"Mrs. Rannoch—"
"I thought you'd finally got round to calling me Suzanne."
Roth took a step forwards, then checked himself, arms clamped at his sides. "Do you know where Miss Dudley is?"
Of all the names they might have heard, that of their children's governess was the last Malcolm had expected. "Asleep upstairs," he said.
Roth's gaze moved from Malcolm to Suzanne. "When did you last see her?"
"In the drawing room after dinner. We played lottery tickets with Colin." And then they had all shared a cup of tea while Suzanne nursed Jessica. Laura Dudley was part of the family circle.
"What time did she go up?"
"About half-past ten, I think," Suzanne said. "I wasn't looking closely at the clock." She exchanged a look with Malcolm.
"You're sure she went to her room?" Roth persisted.
"I thought I was." Suzanne had gone still, fingers taut against the folds of her dressing gown. "Colin and Jessica are asleep. But we didn't look in Laura's room. I'll be right back."
Malcolm watched the doors close behind his wife and turned back to Roth. "What in God's name—"
"Was Miss Dudley acquainted with the Duke of Trenchard?" Roth asked.
Malcolm rubbed his eyes. The aquiline nose and hawklike features of the duke flickered in his memory. "Trenchard? Good God, no. At least, not to my knowledge."
"She hadn't met him at your house?"
"Trenchard doesn't exactly move in our set." The last time Malcolm had seen the duke, outside the House of Commons, Trenchard had called Malcolm a dangerous Jacobin whose ideas would lead to the downfall of all that Britain stood for.
"He's a duke. You're a duke's grandson."
"It's not a club."
Roth raised a brow. "Isn't it?"
Malcolm met his friend's gaze and inclined his head in acknowledgement of a hit. "Trenchard's a Tory, a crony of the Prime Minister. I'm a Whig, whose ideas are too radical even for some members of my own party."
"And his wife's father is your spymaster."
Malcolm swallowed. Anything to do with Lord Carfax cut a bit too close to the bone just now. "Former spymaster. But yes, Trenchard's second wife is Carfax's daughter and my friend David's sister."
"You grew up with the Duchess of Trenchard."
"In a manner of speaking. I was closer to David and their sister Isobel than to Mary. But she and Trenchard have been here once or twice. I can't remember Laura ever meeting him, but it's possible they shook hands at one of our larger parties. We often have her bring the children in. Why is this important?"
The candlelight seemed to bounce off Roth's dark eyes. "How long has Miss Dudley been in your employ?"
"A year. Suzanne engaged her when we were still in Paris." Malcolm had been away on a mission, but he could still remember his wife's relief at having found a governess who would fit into their unconventional household.
Roth moved to the central library table and rested his hands on the marble. "Miss Dudley was living in Paris?"
"She'd gone there with her former employer and found herself without a position when her charge eloped with a junior officer."
"You saw her references?"
"Suzanne did." Malcolm moved to face Roth across the brown-veined marble of the table. "I was still an attaché and doing intelligence work. I was gone much of the time." He could hear Suzanne greeting him on his return home with,
I've found the perfect governess. She didn't bat an eyelash when the cat jumped up on the tea tray and started lapping the cream.
"Miss Dudley wasn't one of your agents?" Roth asked.
"My agents?"
Malcolm looked at Roth over the brace of candles that burned on the table. "I don't have agents."
Roth stared at him.
Malcolm scraped a hand through his hair. "Yes, all right, when I was more actively involved in intelligence there were people who reported to me. But why on earth would I engage an agent to look after my children?"
"For cover. Or to protect Colin and Jessica. Or to protect Miss Dudley. You take looking after your own seriously."
"Laura Dudley never worked for me except as governess to Colin and Jessica. Roth—"
The doors swung open. Suzanne hurried back into the room in a swirl of seafoam silk. "Laura's bed is neatly made up and one of her cloaks is missing. Jeremy, in God's name where is she?"
Roth turned to survey Suzanne. "Do you recall Miss Dudley ever meeting the Duke of Trenchard?"
Suzanne blinked. "Once, at a reception for the Esterhazys'. She brought the children in. I remember Colin shaking hands with the duke, and Mary—the duchess—holding Jessica. Why?"
"Because Trenchard was found shot to death in his study an hour ago. And Miss Dudley was in the room."
Malcolm stared into Roth's hard eyes and bit back an exclamation of disbelief, closely followed by a curse.
"I knew things had been quiet for too long," Suzanne said. "You'd think by now we'd be used to hearing shocking revelations. But—dear God." She folded her arms across her chest, gripping her elbows. Malcolm could tell she was remembering the same things he was. Laura Dudley's titian head bent over a slate or a book with Colin. Laura's steady hands helping Jessica hold a pastel. Laura crossing from the house to the square garden, Colin and Jessica gripping her gray-gloved fingers. Laura's reserved face softening when she looked at the children. Colin kissing her cheek and saying, "I love you." Jessica flinging her arms round Laura's knees.
Thankfully, at such times the instincts of an agent came to the surface. "What's Laura said?" Malcolm asked.
"That she called on the duke to discuss some private business she won't reveal, and that he was already shot when she walked into the room."
Malcolm scanned Roth's closed face. "Surely when the footman brought her in—"
"A footman didn't bring her in." Roth's gaze was as hard and unyielding as a steel buckler. "There's a hidden panel in Trenchard's study that leads to a secret entrance from the back garden. Miss Dudley used that."
Malcolm heard Suzanne draw in her breath. In a world of thinly veiled amorous intrigue, that Trenchard had had a secret passage leading to his study was not so surprising. That Laura had known about it was.
Suzanne's fingers dug into the lace of her sleeves. "And Laura says she came through this secret passage to find the duke dead—"
"Dying. She summoned one of Trenchard's footmen. He confirms that he came into the room to find the duke mortally wounded. His Grace expired before a doctor could arrive. Miss Dudley then gave the footman a note to send to Bow Street and addressed it to me."
"That doesn't sound like the action of a murderer," Suzanne said.
"It might be the action of a very cool-headed murderer. Miss Dudley, from what I've seen of her, is exceedingly cool-headed," Roth said. Malcolm had a clear memory of Roth laughing with Laura Dudley over the tea tray only last week, but Roth's gaze betrayed none of that. "When I arrived she gave me a very brief statement and suggested I remove her to Bow Street before I woke the duchess. She refused to explain further."
"If she'd entered through a secret passage she could have left that way and left the duke to die without summoning help," Suzanne said.
"She could," Roth conceded.
"But?" Malcolm asked.
Roth's gaze shifted from Malcolm to Suzanne. "When I examined Miss Dudley's possessions I found this in her reticule." He reached inside his coat and pulled out a small pistol. The silver filigree mounting gleamed in the candlelight.
Malcolm felt the start of surprise that ran through his wife, the impulse to lie, the quick decision that it was impracticable.
"When did you last see it, Mrs. Rannoch?" Roth asked.
Suzanne met Roth's gaze. "When I locked it in my dressing table a fortnight ago."
Malcolm remembered the night vividly. He'd gone to the London docks with Suzanne, who was meeting a former fellow Bonapartist agent slipping into London on shipboard. There was, he told himself, no reason for Roth to suspect any of that.
"Did Miss Dudley have a key to your dressing table?" Roth asked.
"No."
"Did she know you kept your pistol there?"
"Not to my knowledge." Suzanne clasped her hands in front of her. "Why did Laura say she brought it with her?"
"That it could be dangerous for a woman to be abroad alone at night."
"Did she claim it was her own?"
"No, she said ten to one I either knew it was yours already or would soon discover it."
Suzanne cast a glance at Malcolm, an acknowledgment of presenting a united front, then looked back at Roth. "The pistol hasn't been fired. Trenchard wasn't killed with this."
"No," Roth conceded. "But you have to admit the pistol raises more questions than it answers."
"Where is Laura now?" Malcolm asked.
"At the Brown Bear with one of my constables."
The Brown Bear was a tavern adjacent to the Bow Street Public Office. The runners often went there to compare notes over a pint, but they also frequently commandeered the rooms above to interview and detain suspects. With Laura accounted for, Malcolm knew gathering evidence was critical. "The room where Trenchard died—"