A Crimson Warning (30 page)

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Authors: Tasha Alexander

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BOOK: A Crimson Warning
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“That’s good thinking, Ivy. Do you think Lord Glover would let us search the house?” I asked Colin. “I can’t imagine his wife didn’t keep some sort of evidence against Mrs. Harris.”

“She’s far too smart to have neglected that,” he said. “I can speak to Glover, but I think it would be preferable if you did the actual searching. I don’t want to rifle through her belongings.”

“Why not?”

“It would be more seemly for a lady to do that, don’t you think? Or, if you’re ever under suspicion, should I send a burly policeman to go through your bedroom?”

“Fair enough,” I said. “So that leaves Mr. Foster and Mr. Barnes. I’d like to take Foster as I suspect you, Colin, have an inclination to protect him?”

“I’m not ashamed to admit it,” he said. “And will be desperately disappointed if I have to acknowledge murder as one of his sins.”

“At least you’re admitting he sins,” I said. “I’ll consider that a step in the right direction.”

“You’re awfully hard on him,” Ivy said. “He’s the one who helped you in Westminster.”

“If he were prime minister, you’d have a much better chance at making real progress towards winning the vote for women,” Colin said.

“I wouldn’t want his help if he’s as bad as those papers suggest.”

“I don’t want to get distracted arguing politics right now,” he said. “But would you really rather hold back equal rights for women than let slide some accusations that can’t be sufficiently proven?”

“I’d wager that they could be sufficiently proven if you were willing to thoroughly investigate them,” I said.

“I don’t agree.”

“I see your point,” I said. “But I still can’t concur. I don’t want to support a crooked politician just because he supports my cause.”

“No one has proven him crooked.”

“As I said, no one has bothered to try. Except perhaps Mr. Dillman. And we all know how that turned out.”

 

33

The next morning, even before I’d finished with my toilette, Ivy called for me. I had Davis send her to my dressing room, where Meg was struggling with my hair while I tried to read
The Aeneid
. The persistent rain had made it even more disobedient than usual and I was half convinced my maid was using my body weight in pins in her attempt to tame it.

“You’re soaked,” I said when Ivy pulled up a chair to sit next to me.

“It’s apocalyptic out there,” she said. “And only seems to be getting worse.”

“Do you need tea?” I asked.

“No, thank you. I’ve been thinking,” she said, picking up the silver-backed hairbrush from my dressing table and pressing her fingertips against the bristles. “I need you to help me with Winifred. I’ve lost my nerve.”

“You know Winifred despises me,” I said.

“I know. But there must be some way.”

She looked every kind of distraught. Her face was crinkled and pale, her pupils tiny and hard. I took the hairbrush away from her before she made permanent dents in her fingers.

“You’re very good at this, Ivy,” I said. “Just think how well you did in the park.”

“That was different,” she said. “It was in front of strangers, not someone so well acquainted with me.”

“We’ll come up with something. Don’t be upset.”

“What if she flies into a rage?” Ivy asked.

“She will, but not against us,” I said. “In fact, you’ve given me an idea of how I can help. We’ll call on her as soon as we’re done at the Glovers’.”

It did not break Meg’s heart to have to give up on my hair. With a sigh of relief, she handed me a bonnet that would hide at least some of its unruliness.

“Truly, madam, in weather like this there’s no hope for you.”

I threw a waterproof over my shoulders, Burberry gabardine lined with a fine wool.

“Really?” Ivy asked. “You look like you should be in the country. Possibly shooting something.”

“You said it was apocalyptic outside. I’ve no interest in getting as soaked as you.”

“I won’t try to stop you,” she said. “But it does pain me.”

We went downstairs and she collected from Davis an elegant mantle, with enormous sleeves and wider-than-could-be-sensible shoulders. He held an umbrella over our heads as he led us into Ivy’s carriage, and we arrived at Lord Glover’s house as dry as possible in the downpour.

The man himself was not at home, but his butler said we were expected, and led us upstairs to Lady Glover’s bedroom. He invited us to ring should we need any further assistance, and disappeared, closing the door behind him.

Her boudoir reminded me very much of Constantinople. The walls were tiled, rather than papered, and her bed was draped with richly colored silks hanging from tall posts. Instead of a settee or chaise longue, she had a collection of large pillows—also silk—piled in a corner. A book sitting in the middle of them suggested she liked to curl up there to read.

“I can’t imagine that would be comfortable,” Ivy said.

“Try it. I think you’ll change your mind.”

Ivy looked skeptical, but did as I suggested. “She’s on to something here, Emily. This is decadent.”

Getting up from the pillows proved somewhat more difficult with tight stays. I clasped her hand and pulled her to her feet so we could begin our work. We searched through every drawer in the chamber before moving on to the dressing room, where we met with equally little success. I rang for the butler.

“Is there anywhere else that Lady Glover tended to her work? Or answered correspondence? Does she have a study?”

“Follow me.”

He led us up another flight of steps to an elegant room, furnished in the neoclassical style. It contained a desk and three tall bookcases with glass fronts. The desk drawers had been fastened shut, but it took me fewer than sixty seconds to open them with my lock picks.

Each drawer was stuffed full of letters, most of them from amorous gentlemen eager to express their admiration for Lady Glover. It horrified me to see the names signed on the bottoms of some of them. Was there a man in London immune to her charms?

“I’m almost afraid to keep looking,” I said, “lest we find a name we don’t want to see. Let’s sift through the correspondence, but not read it. It’s unlikely she would have hidden her evidence in a love letter. Unless…”

“What?” Ivy asked.

I passed her the contents of the next drawer. “Search for anything from Mr. Harris.”

“Mr. Harris!” Ivy’s eyes nearly popped out of her head. “You can’t possibly think—”

“Oh, yes, I can,” I said. I didn’t add that if I were married to Mrs. Harris, I, too, might seek affection elsewhere.

A quarter of an hour had gone by before either of us spoke again. Then Ivy threw back her head. “I stand corrected,” she said, and handed me a bundle of letters. Lady Glover kept each of her lovers’ notes separate. Mr. Harris’s missives were tied with a wide, red ribbon. Ivy had identified him from the first in the pile.

“We don’t need to read them,” I said. “Just check to see if there’s anything hidden amongst them or in the envelopes.” I gave half the stack back to her. Halfway to the bottom of those I’d kept, I found a bank receipt for £200, with the words
For Mrs. Harris and her evil purposes
written across the top. Attached to the receipt were two rather shocking photographs of a young Lady Glover in an extreme state of undress and a scrap of paper that read,
I have more.

Ivy nearly fell over when I showed her. “I didn’t know things like that … I … I … What is one to think when confronted with such an image?”

“I don’t believe it’s meant to inspire thinking,” I said. “Come now, we’ve got what we need.”

We put everything else back in its place, thanked the butler for his assistance, and continued on our way, reaching the Harrises’ house just as the rain started to slow. Winifred received us in her private sitting room, near her bedroom. “It’s so early!” she said, embracing Ivy and cringing when she saw me. “Whatever can you be thinking?”

“Forgive me, Mrs. Harris,” I said. “I begged Ivy to bring me to you. I realize that we haven’t got off to a good start, and I wanted to try to remedy that.”

“You’d better serve your cause by trying at a reasonable time of day,” she said. “Morning is reserved for the calls of only the closest friends.”

“I’m well aware of it,” I said. “But I chose the time deliberately because I couldn’t risk coming to you when anyone else was here. Not given what I plan to show you.”

“You know I wouldn’t have agreed to bring her at this hour if it weren’t urgent, Winifred,” Ivy said. Any nervousness that she’d felt before we’d set off seemed to have evaporated. She was poised and composed, but I could tell she wasn’t enjoying herself the way she had in the park.

“I admit I’ve been opposed to your judgmental views. Offended by them, even. And I don’t agree with many of your actions,” I said. “But there are some things so extreme that decent people must rise up against them. When I realized what you’d done—and that you were about to be named as the villain in the story—well, I couldn’t stay quiet any longer.”

“You have my attention, Lady Emily,” Winifred said. “What is going on?”

“You’ve seen these atrocious pictures?” I held up one of them for her. She shielded her eyes and looked away.

“More than I want to,” she said. “Where did you find them?”

“It doesn’t matter,” I said. “What does matter is that Lady Glover is bent on destroying you over it.”

“Lady Glover?” She laughed. “She’s the one who’ll be destroyed.”

“I’m afraid not,” I said. “She’s filed charges against you—accusing you of extortion. I only know this because my husband is privy to certain information at Scotland Yard. They’re nearly finished with their preliminary investigations and are likely to put you under arrest by the end of the day tomorrow.”

Winifred turned bright red and stood up, slamming her fist down hard on the table next to her. “This is outrageous!” she said. “All I was trying to do was keep that woman from further corrupting those around her. Our husbands are at risk, Lady Emily.”

I felt just the slightest twinge of sympathy for her. “I know they are, Mrs. Harris.”

“Thank you for alerting me to the problem,” she said. “But I don’t understand one thing. Hasn’t Lady Glover been kidnapped?”

“She’d already spoken to the police when she disappeared,” I said. “Because of the rest of what they’re having to deal with, it took a little while before they were able to look into her claims.”

“I see.”

“I just hope…” I let my voice fade.

“What?” Mrs. Harris asked.

“If anything were to happen to Lady Glover now—like what happened to Cordelia Dalton—the police would suspect you at once. We have to pray that whoever has her doesn’t lay a hand on her.”

“I hadn’t thought of that,” Mrs. Harris said, her face going pale.

“Is there anything I can do to help you, Winifred?” Ivy asked. “I hope you know you’ll always have my support.”

“I shall count on it, Ivy,” she said. “But for the moment, I have things well in hand. Lady Glover will live to regret this action. She should have left well enough alone.”

*   *   *

Ivy was trembling when we climbed back into her carriage, proving once again her skills as an actress. I’d truly believed she wasn’t struggling during her scene with Winifred. The rain had come back in earnest, and there was no sign of it slowing again soon. She pulled her mantle tight around her as she sat down.

“I don’t feel good about this at all,” Ivy said. “I’m betraying a friend. Even if she is a bad one.”

“You’ve done the right thing,” I said. “We need to find out just how far her vindictive judgment has gone.”

“I want to believe you,” she said. “I do, in fact. But why do I feel so awful?”

I leaned forward and squeezed her knee. “Because you’re such a decent person, Ivy. Try not to think about it. Even if she’s not guilty of murder, she is guilty of extortion, and we can’t let that go unpunished.”

“Do you mean she’ll really be arrested?”

“Not at the moment, no,” I said. “But we’ll be in a position to persuade her to return Lady Glover’s money and stop her from behaving like this ever again. We must continue to be careful, though, in case she has kidnapped Lady Glover. We don’t want to incite her to violence.”

“But we wouldn’t have to involve the police?”

“No, we wouldn’t have to right now.” I thought about this, and wondered if I was treating Winifred the same way Colin was Mr. Foster, protecting her from public censure. The situations were different, of course, but if I was going to argue that justice was black and white, I could hardly keep Scotland Yard in the dark about what she’d done.

Now was not the time to worry about such things. I would get Ivy home and settled and then finish with my plans for Mr. Foster. The rest could be dealt with later.

 

34

Mr. Foster’s butler opened the door the moment I knocked. His master, however, was not at home. He’d gone to Westminster first thing in the morning, and wasn’t expected back until late. I returned to the carriage (Ivy had insisted I keep hers rather than going home for mine) and directed the driver to take me to Parliament. The bottom six inches of my skirt were drenched just from walking the distance to the building’s entrance.

Mr. Foster’s assistant greeted me warmly—he remembered me from my previous visit—and brought me a cup of tea to ward off the dampness that had started to permeate my bones. It was hard to believe that so recently we’d all been complaining about the relentless heat. “I’m not sure how long it will be,” he said. “Mr. Foster went in to the prime minister about twenty minutes ago.”

“That’s quite all right,” I said. “I’m in no rush to go back into the rain.” I pulled
The Aeneid
out of my reticule and read until Mr. Foster stepped into his office’s antechamber nearly an hour later, apologizing for making me wait. He ushered me to a chair near his desk, then sat down, folded his hands, and placed them on top of his blotter.

“What a pleasant surprise,” he said. “I hadn’t expected any respite from work today.”

“I’m not sure you’ll feel so pleased after you hear what I have to say.”

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