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Authors: Lord Heartless

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BOOK: Barbara Metzger
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"Not Sir Gilliam. The man would have married me anytime these past three years. Why should he lie about his bequests?"

"And you turned him down?” Lesley couldn't help the note of disbelief that entered his voice.

"Of course I did,” she bristled. “I would not take advantage of a lonely old man, merely to feather my own nest.” Regrettably, she might have reconsidered it, if it were possible.

Lesley didn't know that, of course, and his estimation of her character was rising. Not many other females of his acquaintance would have turned down a respectable offer, especially when it came with a handsome fortune. “Let me think about this,” he told her, starting to pace. “You say Mason seems to be involved too?"

"They have all been quite chummy: Mason, Broderick, and the solicitor. I cannot imagine what else they might have in common, other than Sir Gilliam's will."

"Well, I am not surprised that mawworm Mason is up to no good, but as for the solicitor, I am not sure. Besides, the fellow would have destroyed any evidence. Wouldn't you if you'd cheated your client and broken the law a hundred different ways? He'd be unfrocked or whatever they do to crooked solicitors, if he were caught with the evidence in his possession. And wills do not simply get lost at legal offices, so it's not a matter of searching through old folders and such. If there had been another document, it was removed, I make no doubt."

Carissa was disappointed that he made so much sense. She checked on the muffins so he could not see her distress.

The viscount was still thinking. “On the other hand, no one makes a will without getting a copy to keep. Your man Mason would have known where it was kept."

"Of course. We both had the combination to Sir Gilliam's safe. Oh, how I wish I had thought to look there before I left."

He kept pacing, thinking aloud. “Don't blame yourself. Mason would have removed it long ago. But he, as opposed to the lawyer, has no reason to destroy the new will, and every reason to keep it hidden away somewhere safe."

"He does? I am sure Sir Gilliam provided generously for him in both versions."

"Ah, but what about young Broderick? He was cut out in the second, I'd wager, or the nearest thing to it, and Mason knew it. That's his hold on the heir. And Mason wouldn't destroy the new will, because it's his meal ticket. He'll bleed the cawker dry."

"Cook thought he was acting like the cat in the cream after the reading. It's possible. Then Nigel Gordon is innocent?"

"Not by half. The scoundrel was likely paid to lose his copy."

Carissa had to agree. “Very well, then all I have to do is find the duplicate that Mason kept. I ought to be able to find some excuse to return to Sir Gilliam's when he is out, to search."

"No! That is, it's too dangerous, and besides, he'd be a fool to leave the thing lying around. Broderick is not so stupid that he wouldn't think to look. No, we'll have to consider this further, watch where Mason goes. I could set Byrd to watching his movements."

Carissa listened to the big man hauling more coals from the bin belowstairs. “Mr. Byrd is not exactly unobtrusive, you know."

Lesley stopped pacing and smiled. “You're right. A Bow Street Runner is what we need."

"I cannot afford such an expense.” She'd looked into the cost of such an investigation once already.

The viscount was not deterred. “If you are in my employ, your expenses are mine. Agreed?"

She was more relieved than convinced. “Very well, but you will please keep track of such expenditures, for Sir Gilliam was a wealthy man. As soon as the will is found, I shall insist on repaying you."

"Naturally. You'll be tending the household books here anyway, so you can keep the tally. And do not worry, I can stand the cost. Of course, I might tell the Runner not to rush about finding the evidence, though, until you get my house in order and properly staffed."

She ignored his attempt at humor. “There is one other thing."

"Ah yes, the third condition. More pay? You've got it, double, triple what you've been earning. Sole authority over all the servants? I'll pull Byrd's tongue out myself if he interferes with how you run the house."

He was smiling, and Carissa had to smile back, but she also had to make one thing perfectly clear. She swallowed, audibly, she was sure, and said, “I am your housekeeper. Nothing but."

"I know, no cooking."

"Cook might be willing to come, since she hates her brother-in-law, but that is not what I meant.” Dash it, she was blushing like a schoolgirl.

Her blushes must have led him to the right conclusion, for Lord Hartleigh drawled, “I do not recall making you any other offers, Mrs. Kane."

She could breathe again. “Fine."

And “Fine,” he said, holding out his hand to seal their agreement. “Now, about the dog..."

[Back to Table of Contents]

Chapter Fifteen

"You have a what?” If Viscount Hartleigh had yelled any louder, the Applegate sisters next door wouldn't have had to keep their ears pressed against their windows.

"A cat, my lord, a perfectly behaved, perfectly groomed cat.” Carissa kept looking in the corners of the kitchen for her pet. What she found in the corners was better left unmentioned, but she did not spot Cleo.

"Fine, your perfect cat can go live in the stables. I'm certain there are some perfect mice just waiting for it."

Mice? Carissa instantly vowed never to visit the stables. “My cat does not eat vermin, my lord, no more than she eats trash.” Hah! Let him say as much for the hound from hell! “She is an indoor cat."

"Glad will never accept a cat in the house."

"Good, then he can go live in the stables. That's where he belongs anyway."

"And your pet doesn't? What did you do, overfeed the pampered puss so it's too fat to hunt? A cat will eat anything it can catch, Mrs. Kane. Of course, your sadistic little tabby will torture its victim first. At least leftovers don't suffer like birds and baby rabbits and squirrels and—"

"Stop it! I know very well that some cats have to hunt for their livelihood. Cleo is not one of them. She has never been out of the house since the day I found her at the doorstep as a tiny kitten, and she isn't going out now."

"What, never? Not even to ...
?"

"I have a box of soil for her that I clean every day. That way she brings no mud or dirt inside."

"No, only clumps of cat hair."

"Not if I brush her. And dogs shed, too, my lord. Or were those hairs Byrd is always trying to brush off your clothes from an incipient bald spot?"

He immediately raised his hands to the back of his head to make sure the damnable thinning area was still covered. “Deuce take it, I am not going bald. And I am not having a sneaky, slinky feline in my house."

"Cleo is neither of those things, and how dare you condemn her without a fair trial? I'll have you know that because she does not go outside, she never gets fleas or worms. Can you say that for the disaster you call a dog? Cleo does not get into fights with other creatures, and she does not bring home unwanted kittens."

Lesley was enjoying himself hugely. He loved when the widow came alive with feeling, how her eyes flashed and her cheeks flushed and her bosom rose and fell with each angry retort. Her whole life was in tumult, yet the silly, loyal chit could think only of defending a fur-ball. He decided to enjoy himself a while longer: “Glad's never brought home a kitten in his life, wanted or not. I daresay he most likely swallows them whole before he gets here."

Her foot tapping angrily, Carissa told him, “You know what I mean. You ride a gelding."

This wasn't quite as humorous. The viscount unconsciously crossed his legs. “What, are you suggesting I geld poor old Gladiator?"

"He'd be happier."

"Now who is judging without having all the evidence? Trust me, Mrs. Kane, no male creature will be happier without his, ah, freedom."

This was a highly improper conversation, and to be having it with one's employer, and in the first hours of a new position besides, was unheard-of, outrageous, and foolish beyond permission. And Carissa was not backing down. It might cost her this post, but she could not put poor Cleo out with the rats. “Your dirt-ball of a dog is not happy, my lord. He is a hazard. A hazard and a glutton. And the laziest, meanest, most cantankerous animal I have ever seen."

"But he is my dog, and I own the house, lest you forget."

"And Cleo is my cat, and I will not move in without her."

"Well, I won't have any witch's familiar near my daughter. They steal babies’ breaths, in case you didn't know."

"Fie, my lord. That is an old wives’ tale."

"And how do you think they got to be old wives? They listened to such lore because it is founded in truth. The ones who didn't listen likely died young, suffocated by some feline felon."

"Fustian. That bit of nonsense came because cats like to sniff at new scents, is all. Cleo knows to stay away from grasping little fingers, and she never bothered Pippa in all the days of her infancy. They grew up together, for heaven's sake. If it makes you feel better, the nursery door can be kept closed when Maisie is not there watching Sue. Cleo comes, my lord. Glad goes. That is final."

Now, Lesley was prepared to let Mrs. Kane move a menagerie into his home, but he was not going to let her think he'd live under the cat's paw. Literally or figuratively. He did have some backbone, although it seemed to turn to bread dough in this female's presence. “Glad gets to come into my bedroom, my study, and the front parlor,” he insisted. “That's only fair."

It was more than fair, and Carissa knew it. She nodded, but had the last word: “Only if he has a bath first."

Just then Byrd called from the cellar steps, where he'd gone to fetch the coal. “Cap'n, you better come see this. You know that old French cognac you was keeping for special occasions? The bottles what were put down before the embargo?"

"Not the cognac, Byrd. Please tell me nothing has happened to the cognac.” He was on his way to the stairs.

"Something happened. I reckon the mutt chased a cat up on the wine rack. I guess I didn't hear the bottles fall ‘cause of moving the coal around."

"A cat?” Carissa screamed, dashing past the viscount and tearing down the stairs. “Cleo!"

With sinking heart, for both the cat and the cognac, Lesley followed. Three bottles remained in their niches. Four bottles were down. Two were broken. A black cat with white socks was lapping daintily at one. Glad was like a pig at a trough at the other. The cat sneezed. Glad burped. Then they changed places.

"I don't believe it,” Carissa murmured. “And what do you think will happen when the wine is gone?"

"I'd wager they'll both have god-awful headaches,” Byrd offered.

"No, for I believe I'll kill each of them,” Lesley announced, retrieving the unbroken bottles. “But our problem seems to have resolved itself. For now, at any rate. I make you no guarantees that Glad won't change his mind."

If he did, he was liable to have a pawful of claw marks on his nose. Carissa didn't think even Gladiator was that stupid. “If that dog chews my cat, his head will be on your breakfast platter, my lord. And make sure he has a bath or he is not coming near my child, my kitchen, or my clean house."

Her clean house, eh? Lesley thought he liked the sound of that. Byrd didn't. After his coffee and muffins, he asked the viscount just who was working for whom. “For it's hard to figure anymore, what with the gentry mort giving all the orders. Now she's sending for that cook from the sir's house,” he complained. “And that's another blasted female here, besides them two and the nipper and the nursemaid. I ain't never served on a ship what had a single one of them, and now the place is crawling with women. It's enough to make a grown man cry, Cap'n. And a cat, b'God. A black cat besides, even if Mrs. Kane pointed out its white mustache and feet. So it ain't a hundred percent bad luck. It's the closest thing to it. And we didn't need no more bad luck, Cap'n, not with babies landing on the doorstep and all. Maybe if I stop down by the docks tonight, I'll meet up with the press gangs. Now, that'd be lucky, by comparison."

"Stubble it, Byrdie,” his lordship ordered. “And pass the soap."

* * * *

Cook was delighted to be fetched back from her sister's house. The brother-in-law, it seemed, had discovered religion. Now he was a Reformer, with no cursing, and no tippling either, allowed in his home. Not even a sip here and there, Cook complained. Instead of being a mean fool, now he was a mean, preachy fool, who meant to see that everyone was as miserable as he was.

Besides, Cook told Carissa as she unpacked her aprons, it would be a treat to cook for gentlemen who appreciated fine foods. Sir Gilliam had barely picked at his dinners, after Cook worked all day at them, and the harebrained heir was usually too deep in his cups to notice what was in front of him. Cook could feed him the cat's dinner and he'd be none the wiser.

Warned about the dog, Cook did not turn a hair. She was bigger and smarter and tougher than any mismatched mongrel. “He couldn't be worse than that Mason, always snooping around, niching a jar of jam or a tablespoon of tea, for his private stock. ‘Sides, once the mutt gets the idea of who feeds him, he'll be trying to turn me up sweet, just you watch, dearie. Like every other male what knows which side his bread is buttered on."

Cook also reasoned that if he was fed well enough, the dog wouldn't go scavenging, bothering the neighbors. His thieving wouldn't bother her, for she wasn't one for leaving foodstuffs out where creatures and casual visitors to her kitchen could just help themselves. She'd put locks on the pantry, if that's what was needed. No, the dog was no problem.

That heathen Byrd, however, was another kettle of fish.

"You show me any more of your tattoos and I'll show you my fry pan, alongside that ugly head of yours."

"Ugly? Why, you wouldn't know ugly lessen you looked in the mirror.” Byrd raised huge, beefy fists. “And I ain't one of your sissified swells, you old bat. You hit me with the frying pan and I hit back."

"You raise one hand to me, birdbrain, and I'll get me the meat-ax."

BOOK: Barbara Metzger
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