“That was marvelous!” Flossy applauded loudly as the lights in the Hippodrome’s auditorium came on. “I don’t know which act I enjoyed more.”
Floyd blinked into the sudden brightness. “I liked the acrobats.”
“Of course you did. The girls wore little more than their underthings.” Flossy suddenly clasped her mother’s elbow and thrust her chin in the direction of two women trying to get their attention. “Oh look, there’s Susannah and her mother.”
Aunt Lilian had already spotted their friends and begun to move off. “We ought to speak to them. Come along. Everybody follow me, now. Try not to get crushed.”
Flossy lost her grip on her mother’s arm. “You’re going against the crowd,” she whined. “We’ll never reach them.”
“Fiddlesticks. We can make it.”
Flossy appealed to her father. Uncle Ronald seemed to agree with his daughter’s opinion that it was hopeless. The audience was simply too thick and they were all heading in one direction—out.
“We’ll see them in the foyer, my dear,” he said to his wife.
Aunt Lilian waved him off and plunged into the stream of people, moving up the aisle. “Excuse me, excuse me,” she said as she battled her way to her friends, three rows down.
“I’m not going that way,” Floyd said. “See you all in the foyer.”
Flossy and I followed him, but Uncle Ronald waited in our row for the tide to deposit his wife back up the aisle to him.
If my hand hadn’t been held tightly by Flossy, I might have lost her, but we made it safely to the foyer with Floyd. He ordered us not to move while he fetched our coats from the cloakroom, and we kept an eye out for their parents. While some of the audience left straight away, many remained behind to talk with friends, and the foyer quickly became crowded.
Now that we had a moment to catch our breaths, Flossy wanted to discuss the show again. “I think my favorite part was the polar bears sliding from the stage into the water. What was your favorite, Cleo?”
It was difficult to choose just one item from the evening’s program—printed on silk, no less. I’d never seen anything like tonight’s performance. Flossy might be one of the most excitable people I knew, but tonight I felt just as giddy after watching London’s newest venue’s opening night show. Indeed, to call it a show wasn’t doing it justice. It was a spectacle. A large area in front of the stage had been left bare with no audience seating. Performers had used both this arena and the stage to full advantage. As with any circus, there were contortionists, acrobats, and high-wire acts, as well as trained dogs, ponies and lions.
But the second half of the show was even more thrilling. The arena floor sank and was flooded with water, streaming from brass nozzles. A theater show was performed on the lake with more circus animals, singing, dancing, comedic routines, and swimmers in figure-hugging costumes. Brightly lit fountains spouted water in time with the music. Boatmen rowed actors from one side to the other, and even deliberately pushed them in, much to the delight of the audience.
The entire production was wonderful, and the brand new venue itself was just as spectacular. I’d grown used to seeing luxury at every turn at the Mayfair Hotel, but the opulence of the Hippodrome’s auditorium was more vivid. The gilded trimmings and red, blue and gold ceiling wouldn’t have looked out of place in a palace.
“I can’t choose,” I told Flossy. “I enjoyed it all. Thank you for inviting me.”
“Why wouldn’t you come along? You’re family. We were terribly fortunate to secure five tickets. It’s a shame they weren’t for the dress circle, but Floyd said Mr. Hobart did his best.”
If the Mayfair Hotel’s manager couldn’t obtain dress circle tickets then I doubted anyone could. According to the staff, Mr. Hobart could get guests and the Bainbridges whatever they desired.
Aunt Lilian and Uncle Ronald found us, dragging a group of friends in their wake liked salvaged flotsam. We ladies waited while the gentlemen fetched coats, chatting about the grand evening we’d had. I recognized some of the group from the New Year’s Eve ball, and they claimed they remembered me. Thankfully none knew what I’d got up to that night and the danger I’d faced when a murderer revealed himself as the clock struck midnight. If they ever found out, they would probably never look at me the same way again. It was better this way, with them not knowing, and Aunt Lilian was also being kept in the dark.
I was glad my aunt didn’t know. She’d be horrified to learn that I’d been in danger, and even more horrified to learn that I was getting my hands dirty by investigating a murder. Bainbridge women were not supposed to do anything more than look pretty and socialize with the guests.
I’d frequently protested that I was not a Bainbridge woman, I was a Fox, but it had fallen on deaf ears. In truth, I didn’t want to push the point and test the boundaries of my aunt and uncle’s goodwill. They had set aside old family wounds and given me a home after my grandmother died, when I had no one else in the world. I would always be grateful.
Aunt Lilian was in one of her energetic moods tonight. She was as excitable as Flossy and just as talkative. Her moods seemed to oscillate between highs and terrible lows. During the lows, she remained in her room and did not accept visitors. She also suffered from dreadful headaches. The only thing that helped was her doctor’s new medicine.
The men returned and handed out cloaks and other winter accoutrements to the ladies. The audience had thinned, and there was a little more breathing room in the foyer, but we only stayed long enough for Uncle Ronald to invite their friends back to the hotel for a drink.
I eyed Aunt Lilian carefully, worried she might be growing tired, but she seemed enthusiastic to play hostess to a late evening party. Dressed in navy velvet, with cream lace trimmings, she was at her most elegant. When she was happy and well, she reminded me of my mother. My memories of her were some thirteen years old, so it was bittersweet to see her likeness in the form of her sister. Some people mistook me for her daughter, not Flossy, as I’d taken after my mother in appearance and, according to some, her character too.
Even though I only knew my mother while I was a young girl, and I’d only recently met Aunt Lilian, at times like this, when Aunt Lilian held court, I knew she must have been the more vivacious of the two. My mother had a more subdued character. Not serious but not someone who liked to be the center of attention, although she had a witty sense of humor.
We headed into the cold night air and spotted the Mayfair Hotel carriage in the long line of conveyances waiting to collect their masters and mistresses. We five piled inside and headed home. Flossy and Aunt Lilian talked about the show, while Uncle Ronald, Floyd and I found it unnecessary to interject. Uncle Ronald and Floyd stared out of different windows, seemingly distracted by the lights.
Indeed, there were so many lights, it was as bright as day. All the street lamps were on, of course, but light also streamed from the windows of the theaters and concert halls. Powerful lights illuminated advertising signs, and a river of carriage lamps stretched as far as I could see. It made the darkness shrouding the Piccadilly Playhouse seem out of place; a missing tooth ruining a bright smile.
“Was there no show tonight at the Playhouse?” I asked.
Floyd seemed grateful for something to talk about while his sister and mother continued their lively chatter, unaware I’d spoken. “Cat and Mouse was supposed to be on.” He peered past me to the darkened theater. “How odd that it’s not playing. I believe it’s been very popular.” He sat back as the theater passed out of view. “I’ll ask Rumford. He’ll know.”
“Lord Rumford? Is he a lover of the theater?” His lordship was a guest staying at the hotel. While I didn’t know all of the guests by name, I made a point of learning the important ones and making myself known to them.
Floyd’s smile looked wicked in the dimness of the cabin. “You could say that.”
“Floyd,” his father barked, proving he was listening to us, after all.
The sharp tone silenced Aunt Lilian and Flossy and nobody spoke for the remainder of the short journey.
The carriage deposited us at the hotel’s front door. The night porter greeted us in order of importance, beginning with Uncle Ronald and ending with me. The chandeliers in the foyer blazed, and a small number of guests passed through on their way to the lift or stairs after an evening out at one of London’s theaters.
The new assistant manager said something to the man he was talking to and approached us. Mr. Hirst wasn’t nearly as handsome or as young as Harry Armitage, the man he’d replaced, but he was just as charming. He was a quick learner, according to the manager, Mr. Hobart, and had already settled into the Mayfair’s way of doing things after ten days. Having worked as assistant manager at another of London’s luxury hotels, he was familiar with the role and expectations. No doubt Mr. Hobart and Uncle Ronald had chosen him for that very reason, to ensure the transition was as smooth as possible. With the hotel being only half full, now was the best time to hire new staff and train them, so Floyd told me. That way there would be no hiccups when spring saw society flock to the city for the opening of parliament and the many entertainments the social season brought.
“Good evening, Sir Ronald, Lady Bainbridge,” Mr. Hirst said.
“Who is that fellow you were talking to?” Uncle Ronald asked, squinting at the other man. He had his back to us now as he walked quickly to the staircase, but I’d caught a glimpse of his beak-nosed profile before he turned.
“A guest,” Mr. Hirst said as the man disappeared up the stairs.
“Who?”
“Mr. Clitheroe.”
Uncle Ronald’s frown cleared. “Didn’t look like him.”
Aunt Lilian patted her husband’s arm. “Your eyesight’s not what it used to be, Dear.”
Mr. Hirst signaled to the night porter to help us with our coats. “How was the show?” Mr. Hirst asked as we handed them over.
“Marvelous,” Aunt Lilian said on a breath. “Simply wonderful.”
“Were the seats in the stalls adequate?”
“Adequate, yes.” Uncle Ronald all but grunted. “The dress circle would have been better.”
Mr. Hirst looked pained. “I’m sure Mr. Hobart did his best and would be deeply upset to hear you were disappointed.”
I frowned. He was twisting Uncle Ronald’s words. Not that Uncle Ronald leapt to Mr. Hobart’s defense. He must still harbor some anger towards the hotel manager and what he saw as a betrayal for hiring his nephew, Mr. Armitage, years ago, despite knowing Mr. Armitage had been a thief in his childhood. It had been my fault my uncle discovered the truth, and it was my fault that Mr. Armitage subsequently lost his job. My heart still pinched every time I thought about it.
“We weren’t disappointed at all,” I felt compelled to say. “The seats were perfect. We were very close to the arena, but not too close.”
Mr. Hirst bowed his head in acknowledgement. Uncle Ronald and the others didn’t seem to have heard me. They were welcoming their friends to the hotel.
Once coats were taken away and evening finery was again on display, Uncle Ronald suggested the gentlemen disperse to the billiards room, while the women enjoy the comfort of the small sitting room. While both sitting rooms were located in the left wing of the hotel, the larger one was reserved for afternoon tea, whereas the smaller one offered intimacy for more private functions.
“Once we’re settled, you may retire,” Uncle Ronald said to Mr. Hirst.
Mr. Hirst bowed. “Thank you, sir. And goodnight.”
Mr. Hirst lived in the hotel, as did the other unmarried senior staff. The only married one among them was Mr. Hobart and he lived off-premises with his wife. The rest of the staff lived in a nearby residence hall. While the night porter and a skeleton staff remained on duty overnight, including in the kitchen, most would start before dawn.
The gentlemen headed to the smoking and billiards rooms in a raucous humor, while Aunt Lilian led the women to the small sitting room, flapping her program to usher us along.
“My program!” I said, stopping. “I left it in my coat pocket.”
“It’ll be there in the morning, Cleo,” Flossy said.
“I want to read through it again.”
She smiled. “You are so provincial.”
I refrained from reminding her that I was from Cambridge, not the country. It wouldn’t matter to Flossy. Anything outside of London was “provincial” to her and therefore dreadfully dull. Only London and it’s endless amusements could satisfy her zest for life.
Aunt Lilian joined us and asked Flossy to fetch her bottle of tonic from her dressing table. Flossy hesitated.
“Now,” Aunt Lilian snapped.
Flossy bowed her head and hurried off.
I returned to the luggage room, which also acted as a cloakroom, and rifled through the pockets of my coat until I found the program. I was crossing the foyer again when the beak-nosed man who’d been talking to Mr. Hirst emerged from the stairwell beside the lift.
He scanned the area, spotted me, and hesitated. I smiled and he touched the brim of his bowler hat in greeting before heading for the front door.
On a whim, I said, “Mr. Clitheroe.”
He kept walking.
He exchanged glances with the night porter. The night porter did not open the door for Mr. Clitheroe as he ought to do for a departing guest.
I joined my aunt, cousin and their guests in the small sitting room, but didn’t feel like joining in the conversation. Mr. Clitheroe had got me thinking. It wasn’t just that he didn’t respond when I said his name, or his furtive demeanor, it was also his clothes. He wore a well-made suit that wasn’t out of place during the day, but didn’t belong in a luxury hotel in the evening. All the gentlemen guests were dressed in tailcoats, bow ties, stiff white shirts with winged collars, and low-cut waistcoats with silk top hats, but Mr. Clitheroe wore a single-breasted coat and high-cut waistcoat with a simple necktie. A guest of the sort the Mayfair attracted wouldn’t leave the hotel in the evening wearing his daytime suit.
Which meant the beak-nosed man was not a guest at all.
“Have you seen the papers this morning?” Harmony stood in the doorway connecting my bedroom to the sitting room, a folded newspaper in hand.
I sat up, blinking away sleep. “What time is it?”
“Eight.”
“I asked you to wake me at nine today.”
“Did you? I don’t remember.”
I lay down again and pulled the bed covers up to my chin. “Come back later. It was a late night, and I’m tired.”
“Your breakfast will get cold.”
My stomach rumbled. I pushed off the covers and picked up the dressing gown folded over the back of the chair. “I suppose you want to know all about the show.”
“Oh yes, how was it?” Harmony led the way into the sitting room and deposited the newspaper on top of the tray’s flat lid where I couldn’t fail to see it. She proceeded to plump the sofa cushions until I invited her to join me for a cup of coffee.
She gave up the pretense of tidying and sat on the other chair at the small breakfast table. It was a little charade we went through every morning. She came to wake me, usually at eight, and sat with me while I ate breakfast, enjoying a cup of coffee. She should have been tidying my suite, and as far as the housekeeper was aware, that’s precisely what she was doing, but I kept the rooms tidy myself. After breakfast, Harmony often stayed to do my hair. The morning routine had given us time to become friends, as much as a woman and her maid could be friends. More often than not, we spoke to one another as equals. Harmony had quickly learned that I didn’t put on airs and wasn’t used to an idle, luxurious life like my aunt and cousin, and I’d realized she was clever and had a thirst for knowledge. I’d taken to borrowing books from the hotel library and giving them to her to read on her time off. Not that she had much spare time.
I handed her the program for the Hippodrome’s opening show and described some of the spectacular acts. While she made all the right sounds, I knew she wasn’t particularly interested. I cut my account short and turned to my breakfast tray and the newspaper she wanted me to read.
I didn’t even have to turn the page to know what had piqued her interest. It was right there on the front in bold type: ACTRESS FALLS TO DEATH AT THE PICCADILLY PLAYHOUSE.
“How terribly sad,” I said as I read the article. “That must be why the theater was in darkness last night. It says here the show was canceled following her death in the afternoon.”
Harmony moved up alongside me. “It says it was suicide.”
According to the article, Miss Pearl Westwood had thrown herself from the second tier dress circle. Her body had been found by the theater staff preparing for the evening’s performance.
“The poor woman.” I folded up the newspaper and set it beside the coffee pot and cups.
“Poor Lord Rumford.”
“Why?”
She gave me an odd look. “She was his mistress. Didn’t you know?”
I stared at her, aware that my mouth had dropped open. “Lord Rumford, the guest currently staying here at the hotel? That Lord Rumford?”
“The very one.” Harmony sat on the other chair and poured coffee into the two cups. She handed one to me, a mischievous twinkle in her eye. “If only Miss Bainbridge could see you now. She’d call you provincial for not realizing gentlemen keep mistresses.”
I closed my mouth and tucked into my breakfast of a boiled egg and toast. “I’m merely a little surprised. I met Lord Rumford. He seems nice. He even told me how his wife was currently in the country as she no longer liked London’s fast pace.” Lord Rumford must have been in his sixties, while the newspaper article claimed Miss Westwood was only twenty-six.
“How convenient that Lady Rumford prefers the country manor,” Harmony said with a wry twist of her mouth. “Gives his lordship freedom to see his mistress while he’s in London. Which he is a lot.”
“She didn’t come here to the hotel, surely?”
“She did sometimes.”
I didn’t know why it shocked me. I knew gentlemen guests kept mistresses, and I knew they sometimes brought them here. A foreign count even had his mistress stay with him in his suite as if she were his wife, while his actual wife was at home in Russia. But he’d been from the continent, and they did things differently there. I hadn’t expected an English lord to parade his mistress openly at the hotel where he stayed while in the city.
Harmony scanned the newspaper article again. “I wonder why she ended it like that? She seemed to have everything she could want. Fame, money, adoring fans and an equally adoring lover.”
“Those are hardly things that make one fulfilled and happy,” I said. “And how do you know Lord Rumford adored her? Perhaps he was about to end their relationship and she threw herself over the balcony in despair.”
Harmony shook her head, loosening one of the dark coils of hair she’d tucked behind her ear. It fell in front of her face and she tucked it away again, although I knew it wouldn’t stay. The errant spring never obeyed for long. “I heard from Peter that he’s very upset.”
“How does Peter know?”
“He saw Mr. Hobart hurrying back and forth with a very serious face this morning. He was organizing flowers, notices for the paper, and sending little things up to Lord Rumford’s room to show him the hotel cares.”
“That’s very kind of him.” It was typical of Mr. Hobart to be so considerate of one of his guests. The manager always put them first, and always seemed to know what they needed, even before they asked. It was the sign of an excellent hotel manager, so Floyd told me.
“I think you should investigate,” Harmony suddenly announced.
I choked on my final bite of toast. I coughed into my napkin, my eyes watering. When I finally recovered, I lifted my gaze to Harmony’s. She was serious. “What are you talking about? What is there to investigate?”
“Perhaps it’s not suicide.” She shrugged. “The newspaper doesn’t say why Miss Westwood threw herself from the dress circle.”
“Probably because they either don’t know what drove her to such a desperate act, or they chose to protect her privacy.”
Harmony snorted. “No journalist is going to worry about her privacy. She’s a star. The public want to know everything they can about her life, and particularly about her death. The first newspaper to find out and report it will sell thousands more copies than their rivals.”
“So you think she was murdered?” At Harmony’s nod, I shook my head. “If it is, the police will find the killer.”
“Perhaps.” She sipped her tea with such an air of expectation that I knew she was going to say more on the subject. I was proved correct when she said, “But they didn’t prove themselves to be very competent in the investigation into Mrs. Warrick’s murder, right here at the hotel.”
I opened my mouth to defend Detective Inspector Hobart but shut it again. She was right; the inspector had been rather slow at finding the killer. His determination to be thorough had been something of a hindrance, but on the other hand, it meant he hadn’t accused the wrong man—like I had.
“Harmony, I’m not investigating Miss Westwood’s death.”
“But don’t you want to be an investigator?”
I chewed the inside of my lower lip, regretting that I’d told her I was thinking about entering the private detective business. “I do,” I said carefully. “But this is not the right case to take on. For starters, there is no client, and no client means no payment. And secondly, if it is murder, the police will investigate. I’ll just get in their way, and Detective Inspector Hobart won’t like it. He’s only just forgiven me for getting involved in Mrs. Warrick’s murder investigation.”
Her eyes gleamed like polished jet as she watched me over the rim of her cup. “Or are you just worried about offending the father of the man you’re sweet on?”
“I am not sweet on Mr. Armitage! What gave you that idea?”
“The way you look at him.”
I sliced the top off my egg with such vehemence it missed the plate altogether and landed on the table. “Every woman looks at him like that. He’s very pleasing to look at. Unfortunately, he has the personality of a man who knows he’s pleasing to look at. He’s arrogant and somewhat rude.”
“I always found him charming.”
“He can be.”
Mr. Armitage certainly turned on the charm when he worked at the hotel. But as soon as he left, the charm slipped and his true nature revealed itself. Of course, that could just be for my benefit. I had cost him his job, after all.
Harmony glanced at the clock and sprang to her feet. “We better do your hair so I can get on with my work.” She gathered up the dirty dishes and placed them on the tray then ushered me into the bedroom even though I hadn’t finished my egg.
I sat at the dressing table and succumbed to her ministrations. Afterwards, I dressed while she tidied up the sitting room. When I emerged from the bedroom, she had the tray balanced on one hand and was heading for the door.
“We’ll talk about Miss Westwood again later,” she said. “Perhaps you’ll change your mind.”
I was hardly listening, however. A thought had occurred to me. “Do you know what Mr. Clitheroe looks like?”
“Who?”
“He’s a guest here.”
“What room number?”
“I don’t know.”
She shrugged. “Sorry. I only know guests by their room numbers not their names. Why?”
“No reason.”
Her dark eyes narrowed. She didn’t believe me, but she didn’t pressure me for an answer either.
I headed downstairs and smiled at Goliath, waiting stony-faced beside a trolley stacked with a large trunk, two cases and three hat boxes. He gave me a fleeting smile, but it withered upon Mr. Hirst’s glare. According to the new assistant manager, porters should be as invisible as possible. I wasn’t sure how he expected someone as tall and well-built as Goliath to be invisible and had once joked to him about it. Mr. Hirst had laughed too, but it had rung false.
Frank the doorman signaled to Goliath to bring the luggage to the waiting carriage. The guests were still completing their check-out procedure with Peter at the desk as I passed them on the way to the senior staff offices.
Mr. Hobart’s office door was open and he looked as though he was just about to leave. Unlike Mr. Hirst, the smile he gave me was genuine. We’d not started on a very good footing, after I’d been the cause of his nephew’s dismissal, but he was quick to forgive me, thankfully. No matter how busy he was, he always had time to speak to me and never rushed me.
Today, however, I sensed his eagerness to get away. “Good morning, Miss Fox. Is there something I can do for you?”
“I wanted to ask you about a particular guest, a Mr. Clitheroe.”
His clear blue eyes narrowed ever so slightly and the sense of eagerness vanished. He was very curious about my interest in Mr. Clitheroe but wasn’t sure whether he should ask me why. No matter how much he’d decided to like me, I was still his employer’s niece and not someone he should be demanding answers from. “What did you want to know about him?”
“What does he look like?”
The question seemed to catch him off guard. Whatever he thought I was going to ask, that was not it. “Medium height and build, brown hair. Rather typical for a man in his mid to late thirties.”
“Does he have any distinguishing features?”
“Such as?”
“Such as his nose? Is it somewhat beaky?”
The corners of his mouth lifted slightly before he schooled his features. “Some would call it a little prominent.”
“But you’re too diplomatic to say it?”
That got his smile to break free. “Is there anything else, Miss Fox?”
“That’s all, thank you.”
We walked out of his office together, and he closed the door behind him. “May I have one of the hotel carriages brought around for you?” At my arched look, he indicated the coat and gloves in my hand. “You appear to be going out.”
“I’ll catch a cab to the station. I’m heading to Ealing to see your nephew, as it happens.”
He stopped short. “Well, isn’t that a lovely surprise. I’m sure he’ll be very happy to see you.”
I doubted that but smiled anyway.
“You’re unlikely to find him there, I’m afraid. He moved out, much to my sister-in-law’s disappointment. She enjoyed having him home these last couple of weeks. But it was time for him to go. A man his age can’t live with his parents for long, especially when he’s been away from home as many years as he has. If I give you his new address, can you remember it or do you want me to write it down?”
I hadn’t expected him to give it to me so easily. I hadn’t even told him why I wanted to speak to Mr. Armitage. “I’ll remember it.”
He gave me the address in Soho, a mere fifteen minute walk from the hotel. “Now,” he said on a heavy sigh, “I have to see a bereaved man about funeral arrangements.”
“Lord Rumford?”
He nodded. “Sometimes this job is disheartening. But you enjoy your day, Miss Fox. No need for such a sorry business to upset you.”
It was kind of Lord Rumford to organize his mistress’s funeral. Then again, perhaps she had no one else. I hoped his wife didn’t find out.
That thought had me shaking my head at the direction my own moral compass was pointing. Three weeks ago, it had been straight as an arrow. Now it seemed not to know which way was the right way.
I accepted an umbrella from Frank at the door and headed off. My thoughts began with the “sorry business,” as Mr. Hobart called it, but moved to the prospect of seeing Harry Armitage again. No doubt he’d be surprised by my visit.
He’d be even more surprised at my suggestion we should become partners in his new private investigation venture. After he recovered from his surprise, he’d give me an emphatic no.
But I knew how to convince him it was a good idea.