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A Poisoned Season

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by Tasha Alexander




  A Poisoned Season

  Tasha Alexander

  For Xander, who prefers

  his books read aloud

  Contents

  At Last the Secret is Out

  Cast of Characters

  1

  THERE ARE SEVERAL THINGS ONE CAN DEPEND UPON DURING THE…

  2

  WHAT A BIZARRE INCIDENT,” DAVID FRANCIS SAID AFTER LISTENING to…

  3

  TO SAY THAT MY MOTHER WAS GRATIFIED BY THE ATTENTIONS…

  4

  AFTER PENNING A HASTY REPLY TO MRS. FRANCIS, I CHANGED INTO…

  5

  I’M SO SORRY, MADAM,” THE MAID SAID, WIPING UP THE…

  6

  INSPECTOR MANNING ARRIVED AT MY HOUSE EARLY THE NEXT MORNING,…

  7

  I STOOD IMPATIENTLY ON THE STEPS OF THE MARLBOROUGH CLUB,…

  8

  MY HEART POUNDED AGAINST MY CHEST SO LOUDLY THAT I…

  9

  JEREMY AND MARGARET DINED WITH CÉCILE AND ME THE FOLLOWING…

  10

  LADY ASHTON! MY DEAR CHILD! ARE YOU UNWELL?”

  11

  IVY LEFT WITH MY COPY OF MARY ELIZABETH BRADDON’S MOUNT…

  12

  THURSDAY WAS CÉCILE’S LAST DAY IN LONDON, AND HER IMPENDING…

  13

  DID YOU PUT THESE HERE?” I ASKED MY FOOTMAN, WHO…

  14

  BEFORE I RETURNED TO MY INVESTIGATION OF MR. BERRY, I HEADED…

  15

  THE DAY AFTER THE BALL I CALLED AGAIN AT THE…

  16

  IT WAS WITH A CERTAIN DEGREE OF TREPIDATION THAT I…

  17

  MY APPEARANCE AT THE OPERA SAVED ME FROM BEING COMPLETELY…

  18

  MY MOTHER’S EFFORTS ON BEHALF OF MY REPUTATION WERE NOT…

  19

  DAVIS WAS CERTAIN THAT NO ONE HAD COME THROUGH THE…

  20

  THIS IS BECOMING A TERRIBLE HABIT,” I SAID AS HOSKINS…

  21

  CODE BREAKING, IT TURNED OUT, WAS AN EXCRUCIATING, FRUSTRATING endeavor.

  22

  IT’S NOT WORKING, EMILY.” IVY HANDED THE BOOKS I’D GIVEN…

  23

  I WAS NOT SURE WHAT TO DO NEXT. THE MATTER…

  24

  EVEN BEFORE I COULD RING FOR DAVIS, THE POLICE WATCHING…

  25

  WHATEVER SUBSTANCE SEBASTIAN SLIPPED INTO MY CHAMPAGNE had been innocuous…

  26

  MY HANDS TREMBLED AS I HELD THE BOOK. “DO YOU…

  27

  YOU SHOULD NEVER HAVE TRUSTED HER,” MARGARET SAID THE NEXT…

  28

  DAVIS, PROVING ONCE AGAIN TO BE NOT ONLY INVALUABLE BUT…

  29

  BEATRICE WAS NOT AT HOME WHEN I CALLED. SHE HAD…

  30

  EVER SINCE SEBASTIAN TOLD ME THAT HE HADN’T STOLEN THE…

  31

  THE MOMENT I RETURNED HOME, I PULLED OUT THE LETTER…

  32

  IT WAS HIS DAY OFF,” DAVIS EXPLAINED, AS I FOLLOWED…

  33

  THE INSPECTOR BROUGHT ME HOME, WHERE DAVIS, TIRED BUT CLEARLY…

  34

  I WAS IN GREECE BY THE END OF THE FOLLOWING…

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Praise

  Other Books by Tasha Alexander

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publishers

  AT LAST THE SECRET IS OUT

  At last the secret is out, as it always must come in the end,

  The delicious story is ripe to tell to the intimate friend;

  Over the teacups and in the square the tongue has its desire;

  Still waters run deep, my dear, there’s never smoke without fire.

  Behind the corpse in the reservoir, behind the ghost on the links,

  Behind the lady who dances and the man who madly drinks,

  Under the look of fatigue, the attack of migraine and the sigh

  There is always another story, there is more than meets the eye.

  For the clear voice suddenly singing, high up in the convent wall,

  The scent of elder bushes, the sporting prints in the hall,

  The croquet matches in summer, the handshake, the cough, the kiss,

  There is always a wicked secret, a private reason for this.

  —W. H. Auden

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  LADY EMILY ASHTON (“KALLISTA”)—Daughter of Earl Bromley, widow of the Viscount Ashton (Philip), and a scholar of Greek language and art

  COLIN HARGREAVES—A gentleman of independent means who is frequently called upon by Buckingham Palace to investigate matters requiring discretion

  CÉCILE DU LAC—A French woman of a certain age, an iconoclast and patron of the arts

  IVY BRANDON—Emily’s childhood friend, a perfect English rose

  ROBERT BRANDON—Ivy’s husband, an up-and-coming politician and very traditional gentleman

  MARGARET SEWARD—Daughter of an American railroad tycoon, a Bryn Mawr–educated Latinist with little tolerance for society’s rules

  LADY CATHERINE BROMLEY—Emily’s mother, wife of Earl Bromley, former lady-in-waiting to Queen Victoria

  CHARLES BERRY—A gentleman newly arrived in London who claims to be a direct descendant of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI

  JEREMY SHEFFIELD, DUKE OF BAINBRIDGE—Childhood friend of Emily’s whose twin goals are to avoid marriage and to be the most useless man in England

  DAVID FRANCIS—A gentleman and patron of the arts

  BEATRICE FRANCIS—David Francis’s wife

  LADY FRIDESWIDE—A terrifying society matron bent on seeing her daughter married to the Duke of Bainbridge

  LETTICE FRIDESWIDE—Lady Frideswide’s daughter, who is not in the least interested in marrying the Duke of Bainbridge

  LORD BASIL FORTESCUE—Queen Victoria’s most trusted political adviser, widely considered the most powerful man in the Empire

  MRS. REYNOLD-PLYMPTON—A lady who takes great interest in politics

  LADY ELINOR ROUTLEDGE—Longtime friend of Emily’s family, widow of the Chancellor of the Exchequer

  ISABELLE ROUTLEDGE—Lady Elinor’s extremely romantic daughter

  LORD THOMAS PEMBROKE (“TOMMY”)—the Viscount Langley, eldest son of the Earl of Westbrook

  LADY ELLIOTT—A devoted friend of Lady Bromley’s and one of London’s most fiercely judgmental society ladies

  MICHAEL BARBER—A sculptor

  JANE STILLEMAN—Beatrice Francis’s maid

  MOLLY, BRIDGET, AND GABBY—Maids at the Savoy hotel

  MEG—Emily’s maid

  DAVIS—Emily’s incomparable butler

  1

  THERE ARE SEVERAL THINGS ONE CAN DEPEND UPON DURING THE London Season: an overwhelming barrage of invitations, friends whose loyalties turn suspect, and at least one overzealous suitor. This year was to prove no exception.

  Having recently come out of mourning for my late husband, Philip, the Viscount Ashton, I was determined to adopt a hedonistic approach to society, something that I imagined would involve refusing all but the most enticing invitations and being forced to cull disloyal acquaintances. This would allow me to enjoy the summer months instead of trudging from party to party, feeling like one of the exhausted dead, finding myself the subject of the gossip that fuels young barbarians at play.

  However, it became clear almost immediately that my theory was flawed. Declining to attend parties proved not to have the desired effect. Instead of dropping me from their guest lists, people assumed I was in such demand that I was choosing to attend events even more exclusive than their own, and there are few better ways to increase one’s vol
ume of invitations than by the appearance of popularity. So for a short while—a very short while—my peers held me in high esteem.

  It was during this time that I found myself at the home of Lady Elinor Routledge, one of the finest hostesses in England and a longstanding friend of my mother’s. By definition, therefore, she was more concerned with a person’s societal standing than with anything else. Despite this, I had decided to attend her garden party for two reasons. First, I wanted to see her roses, whose equal, according to rumor, could not be found in all of England. Second, I hoped to meet Mr. Charles Berry, a young man whose presence in town had caused a stir amongst all the aristocracy. The roses surpassed all of my expectations; unfortunately, the gentleman did not.

  When stepping into the garden at Meadowdown, one was transported from the gritty heat of London’s streets to a sumptuous oasis. For the party, lovely peaked tents were scattered between hedgerows, trees, and beds of flowers, ensuring that guests would never be more than a few paces from refreshment, and the sounds of a small orchestra wafted through the grounds. Young ladies flitted about, their brightly colored dresses competing with the flowers for attention and rarely losing the battle. The gentlemen, turned out in dark frock coats, were elegant, too, keeping their companions well supplied with ices, strawberries, or whatever delicacies might catch their fancy. Et in Arcadia ego. It would take little effort for one to imagine in this scene an eligible prince, all courtesy and ease, graciously bestowing his favor on those around him. But there was no such gentleman at Lady Elinor’s that day. The only prince present—if he could be called that—was a grave disappointment.

  The romantic ideals swirling around the heir to a throne are seldom capable of surviving close scrutiny. In the case of Charles Berry, these ideals hardly stood observation from afar. His appearance was not unpleasant, but his manners were dreadful, and to say that he was prone to drink more than he ought would be a very diplomatic statement indeed. The young ladies who followed his every move with admiration happily ignored all of this; they were captivated by the notion of marrying into a royal family. The situation was rendered all the more ridiculous when one considered the fact that the throne to which Mr. Berry aspired no longer existed.

  “I hoped he would be more handsome.” Cécile du Lac formed opinions of people quickly and rarely changed them. We had known each other for less than a year, but she had become one of my closest confidantes almost from the moment I’d met her, despite the fact that she was nearer in age to my mother than to me. She watched him as she continued. “And he lacks completely the generous spirit one likes to find in a monarch. If he could not claim a direct relation to Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, society would hold him in much less regard.”

  Almost from the moment Louis XVI’s son and heir had died in a French prison during the revolution, rumors that the boy had escaped began to circulate. Now, nearly a century later, gentlemen were still coming forward, insisting that they were descended from Louis Charles. Charles Berry was the most recent to make the claim, and his story was filled with enough details to convince the surviving members of the Bourbon family to accept him as the dauphin’s great-grandson.

  “Don’t judge him too harshly,” Lady Elinor said, moving her hands gracefully in a gesture designed not to emphasize her words, but to show off the spectacular ruby ring on her right hand. “He’s led a difficult life.”

  “Do you know him well?” I asked her.

  “He was at Oxford with my son, George, although they didn’t move in the same crowd. George has always been very serious. He takes after his father.” Lady Elinor’s husband, Mr. John Routledge, had been a steady if somewhat humorless man, who served in the government as chancellor of the exchequer until his death some years ago. George, who was much older than his sister, had taken a position in the diplomatic corps and had been stationed in India for so long that I could hardly recall what he looked like. “Let me introduce you. I think you’ll find Mr. Berry most charming.”

  The gentleman in question stood not far from us, surrounded by several very eligible heiresses whose mothers watched, hawklike, from a safe distance, eagerly trying to gauge which girl garnered the most attention from the purported heir to the House of Bourbon. I wondered if any of them gave even momentary consideration to what it might be like to actually be the wife of such a man. None of the mothers tried to hide her irritation when Lady Elinor pulled him away.

  “How do you find London?” I asked after the introductions had been made.

  “A wonderful city. But I must admit that I long for Paris. I have great hopes, you know, that my throne will be restored.”

  “Really, Monsieur Berry?” Cécile asked, incredulous. “I had no idea the Third Republic was in danger of being replaced by a monarchy.”

  “France would be lucky to have you,” Lady Elinor said.

  “It is not impossible. I, of course, would never presume to seek such a thing, but if it proves to be the will of the people…” He let his voice trail off and looked at me as if appraising my value. “You, Lady Ashton, would be an ornament in any court.”

  “You flatter me.” I saw a look of dissatisfaction pass quickly across Lady Elinor’s face and realized that she, too, had fallen victim to wanting a royal husband for her daughter. Isabelle was a sweet girl, out for her second season. She was not pretty, not in the classical way, but possessed bright eyes and an eager smile that more than made up for any imperfections in her features. I confess to being surprised by how much she had matured in the past year; gone completely was the child I remembered following me around after my own debut, begging for stories of balls and parties. If she still harbored any of the romantic ideas she’d had as a girl, she was headed for disappointment unless she could convince her mother that Mr. Berry was not a desirable suitor. I decided to direct the subject away from the gentleman altogether and turned to my hostess. “Have you seen Mr. Bingham this afternoon?”

  “He arrived not half an hour ago,” Lady Elinor replied. “Though I must warn you that he’s not one for genteel conversation.”

  “I know it all too well. He owns a silver libation bowl—the sort the ancient Greeks used to hold offerings to the gods. The decoration on it is exquisite—Athena, Hermes, Dionysus, and Ares riding in chariots driven by winged Nikes.”

  “What is a Nike?” Lady Elinor asked.

  “Victory. Perhaps you’ve seen the Nike Samothrace in the Louvre?”

  “Ah, yes. How…interesting that you know about such things.”

  “I’ve been trying to convince Mr. Bingham to sell me the piece for the past three months and have barely had a civil word from him.”

  “Are you a collector?” Mr. Berry asked.

  “My late husband was, but he also made many donations to the British Museum. I’ve continued this practice, though I admit it’s not always easy for me to part with what I’ve acquired. But in this case, I want the phiale for the museum. It’s too significant to be left languishing in a private home. I had hoped I could persuade Mr. Bingham to donate it himself, but he will not be convinced.”

  “Aren’t you clever!” Lady Elinor said, then turned to Mr. Berry. “Lady Ashton is quite a scholar.”

  “Surely you’ve put aside all thoughts of studying during the Season?” he asked.

  “Studying Greek, Mr. Berry, is what will get me through the Season.” He made a dissatisfied-sounding grunt, and Lady Elinor smiled, confident that branding me a scholar would be enough to keep the gentleman from growing too interested in me. I hoped she was correct.

  “You speak almost like an Englishman, Monsieur Berry,” Cécile said. “I expected to find you more French.”

  “I spent much of my youth in the United States. We did not speak French, even at home. My father sent me to Oxford for university, and I’ve lived in England ever since. He was a very private man, never wanted the public to know his true identity. I respected this position while he was alive, but now that he is dead, I believe it is time to reclaim my
heritage.” He stepped close to Cécile and continued in a low voice. “I am moved more than you can imagine by the sight of your earrings. I understand that they belonged to my twice arrière-grand-mère.”

  “They did, monsieur, and I thought it appropriate to wear them when I met the pretender to the Bourbon throne. Marie Antoinette had them on when she was arrested during the revolution.”

  “How I wish I could touch them.” He moved even closer to her, and for a moment I thought he would reach out for them.

  Isabelle, who had been summoned to her mother’s side, frowned. “She was arrested wearing them?” she asked. “Aren’t you afraid they’ll bring you bad luck?”

  “Not at all,” Cécile replied.

  “They’re just the sort of thing that would carry a curse, the tragic fate of a previous owner haunting everyone else who possesses them,” Isabelle said with a dramatic flair.

  “I assure you, mademoiselle, that I am not concerned in the least,” Cécile said, shrugging.

  “Where did you get them, Cécile?” I asked.

  “My brother purchased them for his fiancée. Unfortunately, she died before they were married, and he gave them to me.”

 

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