Anthony loved her and they were to be married in two days. What more could she want from life? Though she knew, rationally, that her legal difficulties were far from over, she had every confidence that Anthony, who had left in the early morning for Hurst Park, would sort them out. She spent an enjoyable morning with her future sister-in-law trying on clothes and having Kitty’s maid dress her hair in different styles. She’d never experienced much feminine company and found these sisterly activities thoroughly delightful. It was wonderful to think she’d soon be part of a family. James, she had no doubt, would make a charming brother-in-law, and even the imminent arrival of the formidable Aunt Margaret—she who disapproved of colored dresses for unmarried girls—couldn’t dampen her exuberance.
“Do you think I should wear this when your aunt arrives?” she asked anxiously, though not-so-secretly thrilled at her appearance in the mirror in a dashing morning dress of burnt orange trimmed in forest green. “It’s gorgeous.” She sighed. “I can’t believe you want to lend it to me. But I don’t want to embarrass Anthony by appearing not comme il faut to his aunt.”
“Embarrassment is the last thing my brother will be feeling when he sees you in that costume,” Kitty asserted firmly. “As for Aunt Margaret, she’s not a bad old thing, though inclined to be stuffy. She adores Anthony and is utterly loyal. The only thing that’ll truly upset her is that you’re being married in such a hurry, and by special license. She knows what people will say.”
“What’s a special license?” Jacobin asked idly as she adjusted the feather on her bonnet.
“Normally it takes three weeks to be married because banns have to be called in the home parish of both bride and bridegroom. A special license allows you to be married anywhere and at any time.”
“I know nothing of English marriage customs. I’ve never even been to an English wedding. In France it always takes a long time—arranging the contract.”
“That’s usually true here. I suppose Anthony will deal with the settlements afterward.”
“How do you get this license?” Jacobin hoped it wasn’t so complicated that it would entail postponing the wedding, or even requiring her betrothed to be away for another day. She was already missing him. “Will Anthony have to fetch it himself?”
“From the Archbishop of Canterbury’s office. He picked it up in London the day before yesterday. What’s that for?” Jacobin had leaped up at these words and given Kitty an energetic hug.
“Just that I’m so happy and you’re so kind to me,” Jacobin said.
She almost wept. Anthony had intended to marry her even before her arrest. It set the cap on her joy and made her bitterly regret that she hadn’t reciprocated his declaration of love. A tiny, lingering nugget of distrust had prevented her from averring her own feelings. Not that he’d seemed to notice, judging by his attentions, which had lasted most of the night. Perhaps these things were less important to men. But she minded. She desperately wanted to tell how she felt. Now. She wanted to lavish him with affection and didn’t know how she’d survive until he came home.
A commotion outside Kitty’s bedchamber interrupted their sisterly embrace. The door opened, and a gentleman in a state of considerable agitation burst in.
“Kitty! What the devil do you mean by going off without a word?” he roared, leaving Jacobin in no doubt that she was in the presence of Kitty’s erring husband. “I’ve been looking for you all over London. James told me you were here.”
“I’m amazed you even noticed,” Kitty responded coldly. “And I’m even more amazed that you could drag yourself away from Marabel.”
“Marabel?” A frown wrinkled Walter Thornley’s pleasant face. “You couldn’t think Marabel and—”
“What else was I to think?” Kitty demanded hotly. “You’ve hardly moved from her side since Francis died.”
“I was just trying to be helpful, and keep out of your way since you were obviously tired of my company.”
“It’s you who were tired of me! I don’t know about horses and dogs and hunting and all the things you’re interested in, but Marabel does. At least we used to get on in the bedroom but lately we haven’t even had that. You haven’t come near me in weeks.”
Thornley strode over to his overwrought wife and took her masterfully into his arms. “How could you doubt me, Kitty? You know I adore you, and always have. But you’re so clever and beautiful and know all about clothes and furnishings and fashionable life and I’m just a dull old country squire. Please come back to me. I don’t care how often you redecorate the drawing room, or any other room in the house for that matter. Just don’t leave me again.”
“Oh Walter!” Kitty burst into tears and returned his embrace with interest.
Jacobin tactfully removed herself from the room.
Anthony decided to ride the thirty odd miles to Hurst Park. It would be faster than driving, given the state of the roads, and he was consumed with impatience to find out about Edgar Candover’s movements. As he turned out of the main gate of Storrington, waving to the gatekeeper, another rider joined him and kept pace alongside.
“My lord,” Tom Hawkins said, “you’re leaving early. I will, if you don’t mind, ride with you.”
“If you insist. As long as you’re going where I’m going.”
“I don’t much care,” said the runner, “but I’d prefer not to let you out of my sight.”
“I’m glad you can tear yourself away from the prosecution of Miss de Chastelux.”
Hawkins gave a mirthless chuckle. “That’ll keep. This morning I’m more interested in your movements. I had an interesting conversation yesterday afternoon with Lord Candover’s valet.” Then, a sarcastic afterthought, “My lord.”
Anthony didn’t pretend not to know what he was talking about. At this point he might as well be honest with the man.
“I understand, Hawkins, that you have a job to do and that finding either my fiancée or me, or both of us, guilty of murder would complete that job. But—and I don’t expect you to believe me at this moment—it would be wrong. For the simple reason that neither of us had anything to do with killing Candover. That being so, I am anxious to find out who did, as you should be. And Edgar Candover, who has just inherited both a title and an estate, seems to me the obvious candidate.” He looked down at Hawkins, whose hack was a couple of hands shorter than Anthony’s highbred saddle horse. “I do trust you haven’t been so negligent in your investigation that the thought didn’t occur to you.”
“I thought of it,” Hawkins said. “But you can’t arrest a man without evidence and I haven’t found a single witness who can place the new Lord Candover anywhere near the scene of either crime.”
“What would you say if I told you Miss de Chastelux saw Edgar Candover in Brighton the day before the attempted poisoning?”
Hawkins looked thoughtful. “I would be interested, my lord. Though I regret that her testimony might be imputed to self-interest.”
“Understandable,” said Anthony affably. He’d decided there was no capital to be made from antagonizing the man. “But I’d be happy—and I’d appreciate it—if you’d accompany me to Hurst Park, my present destination, to see what else I can discover there.”
Edgar wasn’t at Hurst, neither did anyone know where he was. The staff there, who had been questioned by Hawkins before, were polite but reserved. They answered direct questions but didn’t volunteer information, until Anthony recalled that Jacobin had lived among these servants and counted them her friends.
“Betrothed to Miss Jacobin?” said the elderly manservant who acted as butler in the absence of most of the household in London. “Why didn’t you say so before? What splendid news! I’d be happy to tell you anything I can, my lord.”
The floodgates opened. In response to Hawkins’s questions—Anthony decided it would be more effective to let the runner lead the investigation—it emerged that Edgar Candover frequently absented himself from the house.
“We assume his absences have always been on estate business but he doesn’t keep us informed.”
“Where does he go?” asked the runner. “Is he riding around the estate or is he in the habit of being gone for longer periods?”
“It’s hard to say,” the manservant admitted. “Mr. Edgar—Lord Candover I should say—isn’t a demanding gentleman. He often dines away from home so there’s no reason for the staff here to keep track of him, so to speak.”
“Was he here yesterday morning?”
“Let me see. He dined here the night before but I don’t remember when he went out. He was here for dinner last night.”
“Would anyone else know when he left the house?”
“Not the house, but maybe the stables. You might ask Josh, the head groom.”
Josh was just as unhelpful. He’d taken one of the plow horses over to the blacksmith the day before, and when he returned, Mr. Edgar’s horse wasn’t in the stables. But whether it had been there early in the morning before he left for the farrier he couldn’t say. They were short-staffed and he didn’t even have a full-time stable boy. That youth shared duties in the kitchen and would have been making up the kitchen fire and blacking the boots first thing.
It was frustrating to find nothing definite, but Anthony could sense that the runner was intrigued. His features quivered like a terrier after a scent, and he made no pretense of being uninterested in the servants’ answers.
“You’re more knowledgeable about such things than I, my lord,” he said as they left the stables, “but it seems to me the estate isn’t in very good heart. I don’t know how it speaks to the new Lord Candover’s motives, but I think it’d be wise to discover where things are financially. Money,” he added, touching a finger to the side of his nose, “is the most common motive for murder.”