Courting Poppy Tidemore (Lords of Honor Book 5)

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Courting Poppy Tidemore (Lords of Honor Book 5) Page 3

by Christi Caldwell

Leaning forward, Steele set a thick leather folder down. “He now goes by the name of Malcolm North. He—”

  “He can go by the name of Satan’s Spawn for all it matters,” he clipped out, as fury took the place of his earlier shock. “There were no living Northrops. The family, along with all their servants, had been wiped out by smallpox.” That fateful event had seen Tristan’s father named heir apparent. “There are no living Northrops,” he corrected. With that, he shoved the folder back toward the other man.

  Steele made no attempt to take it.

  “That is what the world was expected to believe,” Steele said cryptically. “There was a boy.” The investigator paused. “Which makes him the rightful heir.”

  The rightful heir.

  Tristan narrowed his eyes. “How fortuitous that the long-lost heir should come forward now. And this…Percival Northrop should just so happen to reemerge after—” This time, he reached for the file. Opening it, he skimmed the top sheet. “Twenty years.” Tristan tossed it down and it landed with a thump. According to the paperwork before him, this brought the grasper, to… twenty-six, nearly twenty-seven years of age. He searched his mind in a bid to recall anything either his mother or late father had said about the Northrops. “Consider me cynical, but isn’t it odd that the rightful heir, as you call him, should appear now?” Suddenly, after all these years? Shoving back his chair, Tristan stood, ending this meeting.

  “He didn’t come forward,” Steele said quietly, remaining seated. “I located him.”

  That gave Tristan pause. The unease that had been churning through him the moment Connor Steele had stated, “The title Earl of Maxwell belongs to another,” returned.

  He reclaimed his seat. “I don’t understand,” he said in measured tones. “Smallpox wiped out not only the Northrop family but their staff along with it.” All had perished. He’d been too young to remember, but knew the origins of the title that had passed to him. Or he’d believed so. Everything was dangerously close to being flipped upside down. “No one survived.”

  “Incorrect,” Steele murmured. “Two people survived.” The other man paused. “And it was scarlet fever, not smallpox.” He nudged his chin at the folder. “It’s in the file.”

  “Two people?” Tristan asked, ignoring that latter part of what the investigator had said.

  “A maid on her deathbed, and a boy turned over to an orphanage, raging with fever.”

  Tristan sank back in his chair. “And just how do you come to know all this supposed information?”

  A cool smile turned the other man’s lips up in the corners. “It is my job to know everything.”

  Filled with the need to move…to think, free of this stranger who’d invaded his office and made threatening claims against the future he’d inherited, and now sustained his two unwed sisters and mother with, Tristan stood. He made his way to the sideboard. Grabbing the nearest bottle at hand, he poured himself a glass.

  All the while, his skin prickled with the intensity of the gaze trained on him by the other man.

  Refusing to give in to the panic raging through him, Tristan forced himself to face Steele. “I trust you understand why I’m…skeptical as to your claims? Claims brought forward by a…” Tristan’s lips twisted in a cynical grin. “Malcolm North… What is his background?”

  Steele frowned. “I’ve already—”

  “Not that supposed one,” he said with an impatient wave of his glass. “Where has he been these years?”

  “In the streets of East London.” The investigator offered nothing more than that.

  “Well, then forgive me, but I’m hesitant to simply turn over my future”—and more importantly, the future of his siblings and mother—“because of the sudden appearance of a long-lost relative.” Tristan swirled the contents of his drink and took a sip.

  “The transaction…the sale of the child, it was marked with coin and a formal agreement.”

  Tristan stopped with his drink halfway to his lips. In writing, then. “Anything could be forged for the right amount of funds. Anything can be said or done when there is power and wealth at stake.”

  The investigator leveled a hard look at him. “And that is precisely what happened.”

  Ice trickled up his spine, and despite his bid for self-control in front of the man threatening to upend his future, Tristan tossed back a long, much needed drink of brandy.

  “I trust this comes as something of a shock?” Steele said when Tristan held his tongue.

  Only, there was a question there from the immobile stranger. Which implied he was also here to probe Tristan’s role in the elaborate scheme he’d just laid out before him. Indignation swept him, an outrage that proved restorative.

  He set the glass down hard. “I’m not some subject to play your word games with. What you are suggesting—?”

  “I’m not suggesting anything, Lord Bolingbroke. I’ve done my research. I’m never wrong.”

  It didn’t escape his notice that Steele had appropriated Lord Bolingbroke, that lesser title belonging to his late father before he’d become the Earl of Maxwell. “This time you are,” he said flatly. The other man had to be. What was the alternative? That someone in his family had orchestrated the greatest theft? Harmed a child and stolen a lifestyle and wealth that had never rightfully belonged to them?

  And worse…what would it mean for Tristan’s mother and two unmarried sisters? What the other man proposed was a scandal that—if true—the Poplars would never recover from.

  Taking another drink, Tristan steeled his jaw. “This time, you are wrong, Mr. Steele.” What the other man spoke of was impossible. “We’re officially done here.” He stood, but once more Steele remained as tenacious as his name.

  “Are you familiar with your family’s circumstances prior to their great reversal of fortune?”

  Impoverished.

  The Poplars had been an impoverished lot with land that hadn’t produced and crumbling properties that had been largely uninhabitable. There’d been frequent tears and fighting between his parents. And with the thick folder the investigator had amassed, Tristan would wager the title he now fought to cling to that those details were all neatly penned in the other man’s hand.

  He came round his desk and dropped his hip on the edge. “My family’s previous circumstances prove nothing.”

  “They provide motive.”

  Motive.

  One word that made the situation…more real. Nay, more foreboding.

  As if he sensed that weakening, Steele pounced. “Your father had motives and was responsible for removing the rightful heir.”

  A chill scraped his spine. It was on the tip of his tongue to tell the overconfident investigator where he could go. And yet…to do so would be an impulsive act. One that wouldn’t right this situation. And as he’d never been one to run from a battle, he forced himself to grab the folder and confront the ugliness that this man attempted to heap upon him and his late father—and your sisters. This file and this detective represented a peril to those dependent upon him. Coming to his feet, he presented his back to the investigator and skimmed the top page.

  Percival Theodore Charles Northrop.

  Aged: Twenty-Six.

  Age at kidnapping: Six.

  His stomach churning, Tristan flipped to the next page.

  Accompanied to London by the only servant to survive the sickness. Child was sent to a foundling hospital. Sold at the age of six. In that time…

  Skipping over those details, Tristan searched and searched.

  And then found.

  Payments made through the years, in the amount of one hundred pounds monthly, by the Baron Bolingbroke to maintain the silence of the former maid.

  My father. That was who stood accused, and supposed monetary evidence inked on these pages, linking the late earl to…this.

  Tristan snapped the folder closed. He held the thick stack out. “You are wrong.”

  This time there was no attempt to debate the veracity of the
claims being made. And the now pitying glint in the other man’s eyes sparked terror that not even the previous iciness had managed. “I trust you’ll require time to consider…all of this and the ramifications.” With that, Steele took his leave.

  As soon he’d gone, Tristan carried the folder to his desk, and sat—just as the door exploded open. His mother burst inside.

  Bloody hell. “Moth—”

  “There you are,” she exclaimed hurriedly, pushing the panel closed and joining him at his desk.

  “Mother,” he finished his earlier greeting, welcoming the distraction…even if it came from his mother and surely pertained to seeing his sisters properly married and finding himself a wife.

  “What was he doing here?” she demanded, and before he could reply, she spoke on a rush. “That man cannot possibly have any dealings with us.”

  Dealings with us.

  It was a…singularly minor detail to take note of. And yet… Tristan frowned. “Why do you assume Mr. Steele came on a matter affecting us?”

  Angry color splotched her cheeks. “Any dealings he has with you affects all of us, Tristan. Unless I need to remind you, there are your two unwed sisters.” His mother began to pace before his desk. “Marry for happiness, he said,” she grumbled. “They’ll find a husband in due time, he said.”

  Using her distracted, back and forth march before his desk, Tristan collected the heavy file, and deposited it into his top desk drawer. “Need I point out that Christina”—the eldest of his sisters—“is, in fact, happily married with two babies and another on the way?”

  Not breaking her angry strides, she scoffed. “To a self-made man.”

  “He’s gentry, Mother,” he said in the same gentling tones he’d used when schooling his sisters on how to hunt.

  “Poor gentry.” She stopped abruptly. “And it is all because of you.” She stabbed a finger in his direction.

  As if there could be another “you” in question.

  Tristan threw back a drink. “Wanting my sisters to marry happily. How positively barbaric of me,” he said dryly.

  “Shortsighted,” his mother clipped out. She pressed her palms to her cheeks. “Oh, whyever did I not persist? Your sisters need…”

  And while his mother dissolved into a lengthy cataloguing of what his sisters required, Steele’s pronouncement whispered forward.

  There was a boy… Which makes him the rightful heir…

  Tristan’s stomach turned. For though matches for wealth and power had been a luxury before, now the lack of them represented peril. Uncertainty. For his sisters. His mother. Even if…when…Tristan triumphed over some street tough scheming for his title, along the way his name and that of his sisters would be dragged across every gossip column.

  “Are you listening to me?” his mother snapped. “This is a matter of the”—uttermost importance—“uttermost importance,” she finished with her usual overdramatic detailing. Only…where it had once been an almost farcical reaction from his grasping mother, now there was an urgency that she didn’t yet see.

  “I’m listening.” He usually lied. Now, he was. Now was different.

  “There is also your need of a bride and an heir.”

  “In that order?” With the scandal set to hit London involving Tristan and his family, the prospects on that score were grim, indeed. Not that he’d any interest in marriage.

  Her eyes flashed. “Of course in that…” She pursed her mouth. “This is not a time for your lighthearted teasing, Tristan.”

  There’d been no truer words ever to leave the hard-hearted woman he called mother.

  “As I was saying…that man—”

  “Steele.”

  “Has no business here with our family.” She thumped her hand on his desk once more. “None. I don’t want you keeping company with him.”

  The countess’ concerns, however, only stemmed from her desire for proper appearances. “Ah, of course. Poplars don’t interact with those outside the peerage?” he delivered that familiar, gratingly arrogant mantra she’d been uttering since she’d gone from baroness to countess. “I assure you even with my vaunted station”—a station that, according to the previous visitor, was nothing more than stolen goods—“I’m not so arrogant that I’d turn away Mr. Steele.” Steele had uncovered a ring of kidnappings that had been conducted on behalf of a London gang lord.

  Of which, he’d suggest my family is part.

  “You’re not being reasonable, Tristan. He is…he is…”

  “The son of an earl.” Tristan had never moved in the same social circles but society well knew the history of Mr. Connor Steele.

  “The adopted son from the streets,” she said, not missing a beat.

  “And therefore not to be trusted?” he drawled.

  She gave an uncharacteristically enthusiastic nod. “You do understand.”

  “It was a question, not a statement, Mother,” he said coolly.

  His mother slammed her palm down twice on the surface of his desk. “That man is not to be trusted. Why, he was taken in by an earl. Named an adoptive son and how did he repay that warmth? By shedding the earl’s name and marrying a common street rat.”

  Her rank as countess and their family’s wealth had long mattered to her above all else—including her children’s happiness. “Mother, I’ve more important business to attend than your…worry about Mr. Steele’s birthright.” What would she say if she knew how precarious their existence had become…? “Now, if you’ll excuse me?” he asked for a second time. Taking one more much needed drink of his brandy, Tristan set the glass down—

  When he registered his mother sweeping into the seat.

  Bloody hell. Tristan swiped a hand over his face. He didn’t have the time for this. Not now. Now, he had to try and sort out…what to do…how to proceed on the threat made by Steele. “What is it now, Mother?” he asked, making no attempt to conceal his impatience.

  “What did he say?” Her query came faint and threadbare. This from the countess known as a dragon among all Polite Society for her fierceness and fearlessness.

  And the previous bells that had pinged at the back of his mind chimed once more. Louder. More incessant. Tristan eyed her wan features. “What did who say?” he asked measuredly.

  She dampened her lips. “Don’t be coy and don’t play games. What did he want?”

  And for her earlier fury, now all that remained was a shaky fear.

  The reason for the investigator’s visit would shatter her, but the story would inevitably come to her. And it may as well be now.

  Tristan glanced past her shoulder, and when he spoke, he did so in hushed tones. “I’m not sure how much you’re aware of the manner of investigative work Mr. Steele has done these past years.”

  “I’m aware,” she said immediately.

  “He came because he…” God help him, he couldn’t even get the damned words out. Untrue though they may be, once he uttered them, the impending scandal became real.

  “What is it?” she whispered.

  “He claims the previous Earl of Maxwell had a son, and that son did not perish.”

  Silence met that revelation. Punctuated only by the occasional snap and hiss of the fire in the hearth.

  “I’m sure this comes as something of a shock,” Tristan went on, when still she didn’t speak.

  And yet…his mother, given to histrionics when her morning gossip papers were set down on the wrong side of her breakfast plate, remained…motionless. Entirely too calm. Her features even. Her color…the same. There was no call for her smelling salts, or noisy waterworks that produced no water.

  He narrowed his eyes. “Mother?” he quietly prodded.

  The countess jumped. “Hmm? I…” She scrabbled at her throat. Her fingers frantically moved to her skirts. And then back again to her throat.

  “What does he b-believe?” her voice cracked.

  His stomach muscles knotted. “That father was responsible.”

  “Take a child and
place him in some…some…foundling hospital?”—The earth stopped on its axis—“You shame your father’s memory, Tristan. Shame him.”

  Oh, God. No. No. No. Tristan’s stomach pitched. “I didn’t say anything about a foundling hospital.”

  His mother pressed a palm to her mouth, and then abruptly let it fall. “Why…of course you didn’t. I’m simply saying…I was merely hazarding what that…that Mr. Steele said to you.”

  A humming filled his ears. It is true. It is true. Everything Steele had uttered had been based on fact. “Stop.”

  “As if your father would ever do something so callous—”

  “Stop,” Tristan said through that distant tunneling of his hearing.

  “So heinous.”

  “I said ‘stop’,” he bellowed, exploding to his feet.

  Gasping, his mother jumped back…and for the first time in the whole of his thirty-two years—she had no words.

  His hands shaking, Tristan grabbed his half-empty snifter and downed the remaining contents; welcoming the burning trail it scorched down his throat. He set the glass down hard, and then looked to his mother. “I want the truth.”

  “Tristan,” she began in those affronted tones she adopted with the damned servants.

  “I want the truth.” He bit out each syllable as he spoke.

  “He did it for you,” she said on a broken whisper.

  Oh, God.

  A piteous moan swelled in his throat, choking him with the perfidy that had been his existence. Nay, this…none of it had been his. He’d lived the life belonging to another. An exalted one of wealth and opulence…stolen for him by his parents.

  A restless energy filled him. Tristan took a step. And then stopped.

  He took another. He needed to flee. To think.

  Only there was nowhere to go. And there was nothing that would make sense of…this. Of what his family had done. Of what he himself had unwittingly been part of. Tristan, who’d held his honor above all else: on the battlefield. In his family. In his every relationship. Should now find his fortunes and recent past and now present were a product of the greatest dishonor.

  I am going to throw up.

  “Don’t look at me like that,” she whispered, snapping him back.

 

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