Murder at the Mikado (A Drew Farthering Mystery Book #3)

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Murder at the Mikado (A Drew Farthering Mystery Book #3) Page 1

by Julianna Deering




  © 2014 by DeAnna Julie Dodson

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2014

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-6405-3

  Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.

  This is a work of historical reconstruction; the appearances of certain historical figures are therefore inevitable. All other characters, however, are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Cover design by Faceout Studio

  Cover illustration by John Mattos

  Author is represented by Books & Such Literary Agency

  To the One who remembers me according to His love

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Books by Julianna Deering

  Back Ads

  Back Cover

  One

  Actors,” the barman muttered to no one in particular as he wiped a freshly washed glass.

  The Knight and Steed was empty but for the dozen or so customers clustered around the big table in the middle of the room and two others off by themselves in the corner. From the gramophone, a quartet sang the jaunty American tune “Nobody’s Sweetheart.”

  They all knew one another, of course. All of them came from down the street at the Tivoli. Mostly they came in late, after performances, with the rest of the theater crowd. But Mondays, when the theater was closed or when they’d had an early rehearsal, they might come in for a little something, often with friends and hangers-on.

  This was one of those early days. It wasn’t even five o’clock yet, a grim, blustery afternoon, and they’d only just started to drink. The large group was boisterous, chatting and laughing, sometimes roaring when one of them displayed a spark of wit. The two in the corner were huddled together, talking so low no one could have heard them even if the others had been utterly silent.

  The man was well known, lead actor and owner of the Tivoli. His leading-lady wife was sitting at the large table with the others. The woman with him was a reporter for one of the local scandal sheets. As he spoke to her, his eyes gleamed with a passion that had nothing to do with love or even lust, yet it was vivid and urgent all the same.

  “Not much more,” he was saying when the barman brought them a second round, sherry for him and pale ale for the woman. “It’s exactly what they want, you’ll see. And it’s got plenty of—”

  He broke off, glaring until the barman hurried away. Then he and the reporter put their heads together, conspiring once more as the group at the large table called out their orders.

  “Coming,” the barman singsonged. “Coming.”

  Before he was again behind the bar, the door swung open with a jingle of the bell and a rush of November wind and then clattered shut again. A tall woman swathed in furs hurried over to the corner table.

  “Fleur, darling.” The actor smiled lazily and did not rise. “I didn’t think we’d see you again so soon.”

  Seeing he was not going to take her coat, the woman removed it herself, revealing an alluring body clad in the latest fashion. She brushed a few determined snowflakes off her sleek black hair and looked pointedly at the unoccupied chair next to him.

  He shrugged. “Some other time, love. I have business to attend to.”

  She sat anyway, ignoring the other woman at the table. “We have to talk, Johnnie. I mean it.”

  His wife glanced at him from the middle of the room, her expression a mix of boredom and disdainful amusement, and then she turned, laughing, to her companions again. The actor lifted his glass to her and took a sip of sherry before turning his attention back to his uninvited guest.

  “You’d best get used to the idea, love. I’m absolutely going to—”

  He scowled at the barman, who had brought the other table their drinks and was making a great show of not listening in, and then he dropped his voice. The conversation was again low and intense, until the lady reporter gave a shrill, mocking laugh.

  The room fell silent. With a dull screech of chair legs, the newcomer sprang to her feet and snatched up her furs.

  “You don’t really want to do that, Johnnie.” Her black eyes snapped in her pale, perfect face. “I promise you don’t.”

  The actor merely gave her a wink and a grin. “Do pop round again, darling, when we’re not so busy, eh?”

  “Come on, Fleur,” cried one of the men from the other table, a character actor, bald and rotund. “Have a drink with us. Leave those two to their plotting. It’s all monstrously dull. Come and hear all about when I played Hamlet in Berlin. I was all of twenty-two.”

  “Don’t be absurd,” said the bored young man who played all the juvenile leads. “When you were twenty-two, Hamlet hadn’t even been written.”

  “Yes, do join us, Fleur,” the leading lady drawled over the good-natured jeering that followed his remark. She leaned back so she could pull up a chair from an empty table. “Johnnie seems to be quite done with you.”

  With an icy glare the other woman shrugged into her furs and stalked into the cold.

  “Oh, dear.” The leading lady traced one slender finger over the rim of her wineglass. “What a shame.”

  “Lovely as always, darling.” Drew Farthering took his fiancée’s hand and pressed a light kiss to the back of it. “You look a positive angel in that gown.”

  Madeline Parker’s blue eyes sparkled, and she did a half turn, displaying the cream tulle interspersed with little satin motifs like swallows’ wings. “Like it?”

  “Very much. Mrs. Landis is bound to ask the name of your dressmaker.”

  Madeline stopped before the mirror in Farthering Place’s upper hallway and smoothed her already flawless dark hair. “What’s she like anyway? Have you met her?”

  “No, but judging by Landis, she’s comfortably forty, extremely pleasant, and absolutely respectable. I’m certain you two will get on famously.”

  He moved over beside her, studying the totality of the reflection. In the stately surroundings of his ancestral home, he saw a beautiful girl with a sweet face and eyes that showed more than her fair share of intelligence and good humor. Beside her was a young man who looked far happier than he deserved. Well, why shouldn’t he look happy?

  It was November, and the grim events of the past summer were behind them now. His comp
any, Farlinford Processing, had survived embezzlement, fraud, and near bankruptcy, and now, under experienced management, it was recovering nicely. He had himself—through what seemed little short of a miracle—survived near death. And after a whirlwind courtship, though he couldn’t help thinking her consent was because of that near death, Madeline had at last agreed to marry him. In just one month she would be forever his own. What more could he want?

  She brushed an imaginary speck of dust from his shoulder and straightened his tie just a fraction of an inch.

  “How are you and Plumfield getting along?” she asked.

  He chuckled. “Perhaps you ought ask how he and Denny are getting along. I’m not used to having a valet, even though it has been a local scandal the past decade, but Denny has enough to do just to look after the house without having to tend to me, as well. I believe there is a silent war going on between him and Plumfield over whether I should wear gold cuff links or platinum and whether having them monogrammed is overly ostentatious.”

  “Oh, dear,” she said, feigning horror.

  “Yes, it’s been frightful. I feared I would have to wear one of each, you know, just to keep the peace. But now I wonder if that might not have actually brought them to blows.”

  He offered her his arm and was accepted.

  “Where is Aunt Ruth?” he asked as they turned to go down the sweeping stairs. “Shall we go and fetch her?”

  “No need to fetch anyone, young man. I’m coming.”

  Ruth Jansen bustled down the hallway, always swift and purposeful, despite her cane. She wore black as she always had since she had come to Farthering Place as Madeline’s chaperone, as she had since losing her fiancé just before their wedding some thirty years ago, but her gown was simple and attractive.

  Drew made a slight bow. “Good evening, ma’am. You’re looking quite charming this evening.”

  “Flatterer,” she said half under her breath, yet there was a twinkle in her eye as she took his free arm. “I hope you and this Landis fellow aren’t going to talk business all night.”

  “We’ll try to keep it to a minimum, Aunt, I give you my word on it.” He patted her hand. “And I promise you’ll like Landis. He’s a good man. He’s done wonders with Farlinford already. You know I know nothing about the oil business, and he’s come in as if he’d already been there twenty years. Things are improving exponentially. By the time he’s been there a year he’ll have saved us at least three or four times the price of his salary, I’m certain of it.”

  “Hard worker, is he?” she asked, eyes narrowed.

  “Decidedly. But you needn’t worry he’ll talk business all night. He’s far more likely to tell you at length about his little son.”

  Madeline beamed at him. “A little boy? How old?”

  “Four, I believe. And a marvel unmatched in modern memory, if I’ve heard properly.”

  Madeline laughed. “Oh, I think it’s too sweet. I like Mr. Landis already.”

  At that, the front bell rang, and Dennison crossed the foyer to the door. In another moment he came to stand at the foot of the stairs.

  “Mr. and Mrs. Landis, sir.”

  Drew escorted Madeline and her aunt down the last few steps and into the foyer, smiling at the amiable, fortyish-looking man waiting there. Brent Landis’s hand was already outstretched.

  “Mr. Farthering, good evening. So good of you to have us. Afraid we’re a few minutes early. I hope that’s not too much of a bother.”

  “Heavens, no, Landis. Not at all. Good of you to come.” Drew shook his hand. “Aunt Ruth, Madeline, darling, this is Brent Landis. Landis, my fiancée, Madeline Parker, and her aunt, Miss Jansen.”

  Landis bowed to the ladies, and Aunt Ruth gave him a serene nod.

  Madeline also shook his hand. “Drew tells me you’ve done wonders at Farlinford already.”

  “It’s been only four weeks, Miss Parker. Wonders take at least five.” Landis chuckled and then looked around. “Now where’s my wife got to? Come along, darling. You look glorious as always.”

  Mrs. Landis turned from the hall mirror, still patting the thick black hair that was twisted into a chignon at the nape of her neck. Her lips, as red and glistening as rubies, were pursed into a knowing little smirk, and her black eyes gleamed as she held out one slender hand.

  Drew’s smile faltered. “Fleur.”

  She dropped her chin to her white shoulder, giving him a coy glance from under her black lashes. “Surprise.”

  Landis looked at her, then at Drew, then at her again. “You and Mr. Farthering know each other, do you? Why didn’t you tell me?”

  Her smile was hardly more than a knowing quirk of her full lips. “Well, I thought it would be rather fun to surprise you both. It’s been simply ages, hasn’t it, Drew?”

  “Rather,” he replied.

  No one said anything for a moment, and then there was the sound of swift footsteps on the stairs as Nick Dennison came to join them.

  “I do beg your pardon, ladies and gentlemen. I had a bit of estate business to see to and couldn’t get away.” He slicked back his tawny hair, still damp, and looked at Drew. “Introduce me, won’t you?”

  “Certainly.” Drew nodded stiffly. “Mr. and Mrs. Landis, this is Nick Dennison. He is taking over the managing of the estate and otherwise gets me into and out of mischief. Nick, Mr. and Mrs. Landis.”

  Fleur smiled at him with a pretty tilt of her head.

  “Mrs. Landis.” Nick obliged her with a look of somewhat-stunned recognition, and then he and Landis shook hands. “Good to meet you, Mr. Landis.”

  Just then the bell sounded, and as his duty as host required, Drew offered Fleur his arm. “May I, Mrs. Landis?”

  She accepted, her slim hand white against his dinner jacket, and with a bow, Nick held out his arm and escorted Aunt Ruth.

  “Miss Parker?” Landis said, and with an uncertain smile she took his arm and went last into the dining room.

  Madeline and Drew took their places at opposite ends of the long, gleaming table, with Landis and Nick on Madeline’s right and left and Fleur and Aunt Ruth on Drew’s.

  Drew glanced at his guests. Just as he and Nick did, Landis wore eveningwear that was absolutely correct in every respect. Fleur was wearing a beaded net gown, black to show off her pale, perfect skin, the daring bodice open to the waist in back and on both sides, and the skirt slit up high on the right. He was used to seeing women in such gowns. Bare backs and arms and sides were all the fashion these days, but Fleur . . . Fleur was Fleur, and there was always something a bit bold, a bit wild about her, even when she was seated quietly at the dinner table as the soup was served.

  Madeline was her near opposite, demure in creamy white tulle, the ruffled, transparent sleeves flowing like angel wings from her shoulders. He smiled across the table at her, a subtle, intimate smile just for her, and she returned it just as subtly before turning to Landis.

  “How have you liked working at Farlinford, Mr. Landis? Drew tells me it was in a bad way before you came.”

  “Oh, it wasn’t too terribly bad, Miss Parker. Certainly there were some places that needed shoring up, a few rather thorny knots to untangle, but nothing that can’t be put right in time.”

  Drew nodded as he took a sip of mock turtle soup. “You see, darling? I soon won’t be needed at Farlinford at all. Then you’ll have to figure out how to keep me entertained day in and day out.”

  “You never go in to work as it is, and you seem to have no trouble getting into mischief all on your own,” Aunt Ruth observed with a twinkle in her eye.

  He laughed. “I suppose not, ma’am, but at least when I do I won’t have to worry about the business going south, as well.”

  “Drew tells me you have a great deal of experience in the oil business, Mr. Landis,” Nick said.

  “About twenty years now,” Landis replied. “I’d been with Anglo-Persian Oil for the past sixteen, but I thought it was time I tried something new.” He glanced at Drew, a touch of
sympathy in his expression. “Well, after everything that happened this past summer, I knew it would take some work to get Farlinford back running as she should, and I thought that was just the challenge I’d like to take on. I’m glad Mr. Farthering agreed to let me give it a go.”

  “No doubt Anglo-Persian wasn’t at all pleased with me stealing you away from them,” Drew said. “But all’s fair, eh?”

  Fleur huffed, looking only good-naturedly put out. “Must you discuss business all night, Brent? Don’t you have enough of that at the office?”

  Landis bowed and said, “I beg your pardon, ladies.”

  “Sorry,” Drew added. “How about something a bit more congenial, darling?”

  “Well, Mrs. Landis has told us hardly anything about herself.” Madeline took a taste of her soup. “How long ago did you and Drew meet, Mrs. Landis?”

  “Oh, heavens.” Fleur’s laugh was light and silvery. “Such ancient history. How long ago was it, Drew, love? Five years?”

  “Six.” He knew the word had come out more sharply than it should have, and he forced his expression into something more pleasant. “It is six, I believe. I remember because it was my first term there.”

  “What children we were.” Fleur dipped her spoon in her bowl, toying with it. “But what lovely times we had. I so enjoyed Oxford. So pretty and so, oh, I don’t know, just brimming with knowledge. One could feel it in the air, didn’t you think so, Drew?”

  “I know I learned a great deal there, yes.”

  Madeline was looking at him, trying to read his thoughts as always, and then she turned to Fleur. “Were you at the university too, Mrs. Landis?”

  Again Fleur laughed. “I was with a repertory company there in the city. Light opera. Gilbert and Sullivan mostly. It was great fun.”

  Madeline glanced at Drew once more, but kept her attention on Fleur. “That must have been terribly interesting. Do you still act?”

  “Oh, no.” She bit her lip, and a certain wistfulness came into her eyes. “I left it all for dear Brent.” She looked at her husband, her lips turned up on one side. “And then we had Peter, and that was the end of my time before the footlights. Of course, a woman’s figure is always a bit frumpy afterward.”

 

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