The Peacock Throne
Page 1
The PEACOCK THRONE
“Regency romance, murder mystery, and exotic adventure all in one, The Peacock Throne is a dazzling read.”
JULIANNA DEERING, author of the Drew Farthering Mysteries
“Prepare yourself for exquisite romance, espionage, and international intrigue. Lisa Karon Richardson writes with a beauty and understated elegance all her own. You won’t want to miss out on this fabulous adventure.”
DINA SLEIMAN, author of the Valiant Hearts Series
“In her stirring novel, The Peacock Throne, Lisa Karon Richardson takes the reader on a journey spanning two continents and unraveling several lifetimes’ worth of secrets. Clear the decks and prepare to be swept away. Adventure awaits!”
JENNIFER ALLEE, ECPA Bestselling author
“Engaging characters, an intriguing plot, and fine storytelling come together to gift the reader with a satisfying story. I have long been a fan of Lisa’s work, and this may be her best book yet.”
LAURIE ALICE EAKES, author of A Stranger’s Secret
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Influenced by books like The Secret Garden and The Little Princess Lisa’s early stories were full of boarding schools and creepy houses. These days, even though she’s (mostly) grown-up she still loves a healthy dash of adventure in any story she creates, even in real-life. The Peacock Throne was the first full novel Lisa ever wrote and has always been particularly special to her, even though it lay unpublished. Now an award-winning published author, she felt it was finally time to dust off and revisit the adventures of Lydia, Anthony, and Marcus, using the skills acquired writing almost a dozen other novels. Lisa is now concentrating on writing their next adventure…
LISA KARON RICHARDSON
The PEACOCK THRONE
For my husband, Joel, whose support gave me the courage to chase my dreams. I love you.
Text copyright © 2015 Lisa Karon Richardson
This edition copyright © 2015 Lion Hudson
The right of Lisa Karon Richardson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
All the characters in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Published by Lion Fiction
an imprint of
Lion Hudson plc
Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road
Oxford OX2 8DR, England
www.lionhudson.com/fiction
ISBN 978 1 78264 178 0
e-ISBN 978 1 78264 179 7
Acknowledgments
Cover images: ship © Spectral-Design/istockphoto;
woman © Lee Avison/Trevillion Images.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many thanks to all those who acted as beta readers: Jeannie Collins, Lisa Barnette, Allison Barnette, Mom, Dad, and all the others I conned into taking their time to give me feedback. I’d also like to offer sincere thanks to the fantastic editorial team at Lion Hudson: Tony Collins, Jessica Tinker, Kate Kirkpatrick, and Sheila Barnes. Thanks for all you have done to make this story come to life. You’re wonderful.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
CHAPTER 38
CHAPTER 39
CHAPTER 40
CHAPTER 41
CHAPTER 42
CHAPTER 43
CHAPTER 44
CHAPTER 45
HISTORICAL NOTE
CHAPTER 1
Mayfair, London
Home of the Earl of Danbury
28 March 1802
The tiny snick of the latch sounded. Anthony rubbed at the stubble on his chin and turned a jaundiced eye to the intruder. Pale and dishevelled, his usually unflappable valet came to a halt in the centre of the room.
“What is it?”
“I’m sorry, sir. It’s y… your father.” The valet paused, seeming at a loss.
Anthony sat up, kicking at the sheets. “Spit it out.”
“Jane found him. He is…. He’s been murdered, sir.”
Anthony clutched the edge of his bed. “What?”
“Your father…” James’s voice died away. He waved a hand vaguely towards the hall.
What a ridiculous mistake. Setting his jaw, Anthony jumped to his feet and marched to the door. He would straighten all this out. “Where?” he demanded as he grabbed the knob.
“In his bedchamber.”
Servants clustered in the long corridor, their voices an agitated buzz. The frightened gazes following his progress clutched at him. Something was truly wrong. He swallowed hard against the sudden fear. He picked up speed and barrelled through the door to his father’s bedroom, driven by the lash of desperate hope.
The old gentleman lay huddled on the bed but there was no mistaking his posture for sleep.
Anthony’s eyes shied from the form, staring instead at the blood-soaked bedclothes. Surely, the figure was too small to be his robust father? But he could not force his gaze back to the bed, not just yet. He surveyed the rest of the room. There was no sign of struggle. Nothing appeared out of place, but then, he had rarely entered this sanctum sanctorum of his father’s experience.
Placing a hand over his mouth and nose to block the odour of slaughter, he steeled himself to approach and examine the body. A curved knife with an engraved ivory handle protruded from his father’s chest. His face grew hot; he was trying to absorb the image without allowing its reality to pierce him. Calling on the reserves of his fortitude, he forced his gaze to his father’s face.
A grimace obliterated the familiar features. No sign remained of the vigorous, cheerful man Anthony knew so well.
He grasped his father’s hand and found it cold and stiff. His thoughts tilted and slid, scattering like dropped coins. His head throbbed in relentless rhythm. He wasn’t sure how long he hunched there, but when at last he straightened, his shoulders had grown stiff. With a concerted effort of will he collected himself. Releasing that hand was the most difficult thing he had ever done: it was as if he were giving his father permission to slip away from him. He clenched his trembling hands into fists. Someone would suffer for this.
“James.” At least he had found his voice—even if it did sound strained.
“Yes, sir.” The young man started to attention, swiping at the tears on his face.
“Send a footman for the magistrate and another to Bow Street for a runner. Then come and help me dress. I’ll not receive h
im in my nightclothes.”
James nodded, and ran to do his bidding.
Anthony hesitated. Gritting his teeth, he stepped from the room. The number of servants in the hall had swelled. Their anxious muttering stopped as he emerged. Stricken faces told of their distress. He needed to reassure them somehow, though his innards swarmed like a nest of wasps.
He had to clear his throat before he could speak. Even then when he addressed them it was in a voice roughened by tightly reined emotion. “His Lordship has… he has passed away.”
The silence might have deafened him. They already knew. He cleared his throat and tried again.
“Bow Street is being summoned.” A measure of his fury slipped into his tone. “When the runner arrives, I expect you to cooperate with him to the fullest. The murderer will be found and brought to justice. No matter where he lies.”
Grief strangled him. He didn’t know what else he would have said, but it made no difference. He could not continue. A path opened before him as if he were Moses parting the Red Sea. Anthony made his way through the throng, accepting the murmured condolences with what grace he could muster.
The world had gone mad. There was no other explanation.
James’s quiet return interrupted his muddled thoughts. Tamping down the consciousness of his loss in a flurry of activity, Anthony dressed and flung orders about with little consideration for where they landed.
His cravat was in a hopeless tangle. He hurled the thing on the grate. He needed to be doing something. Why was the runner taking so long? His eyes burned and he knew that if he sat down, he would succumb to the pain. He scraped a hand through his hair. He could not sit. The murderer must be caught.
Ever meticulous, James approached with a fresh square of linen, but Anthony waved him off. He would not spend the morning preening while his father’s corpse lay down the hall and nothing was being done about it. By the same token he needed to show due respect. He waved his valet back and grudgingly submitted to his ministrations. The instant James stepped away, Anthony stalked from his room and nearly overturned a maid carrying a breakfast tray redolent with ham and fresh bread. He gripped her shoulders to steady her, then shooed her away.
Taking up position in the drawing room, Anthony prowled the edges as if he suspected the killer might yet be lurking beneath one of the couches. His throat remained constricted, his eyes hot. He couldn’t sit. He examined the familiar pattern of the red and gold Turkish carpets, then ran a hand along the smooth back of the silk upholstered couch as he passed by. He paused and stared out of the wide front window for a moment but half a dozen gawkers stood on the street, staring and pointing at the house. Londoners seemed to have supernatural ability when it came to sensing tragedy or scandal. Anthony pulled away from the window, retreating to pace about the room again.
It wasn’t until a footman ushered in the runner, at last, that Anthony stilled. He had a task now. He needed to get the thief-taker’s measure. Large and thick-boned, the bruiser’s heavy features were set in what he probably meant to be a reassuring expression. In short, the new arrival looked more likely to commit a murder than to solve one.
He extended a meaty paw towards Anthony, who shook it reluctantly. He was unaccustomed to such familiarity from people he did not know, but the imperative to offer consideration to those of lower rank overrode the etiquette ingrained in him. Perhaps it wouldn’t be so very bad to have a formal police force, as other nations did. This man was none too clean. Stubble peppered his pockmarked cheeks and he wore a vest but no jacket. His faded red shirt, a mark of his office, appeared grimy. His hand rested on the cudgel tucked into his belt, as if he anticipated using it at any moment.
“Name’s Rodney Perkins. I understand there’s been a bit o’ mischief.”
“My father has been murdered. I believe that qualifies as more than mischief.”
“Right you are. No offence intended, I’m sure, Lord Danbury.”
Anthony grimaced at the unaccustomed title. “Do not call me that. The title has not been confirmed. It’s… it is too soon. I am Viscount Graham.”
“As you like, sir. As you like.” Perkins rubbed his hands together and looked about. “Where’s the body?”
“This way. We left everything as we found it.” Anthony led the man up the broad front stair and down the hall to the door of the bedchamber.
“Anythin’ missin’?”
Anthony’s brow creased. “I don’t believe so. His valet may know better than I. The staff reported nothing missing. I’m certain they would have come to me if they had discovered something had been stolen.” He was babbling. Taking a deep breath he ushered Perkins into his father’s room.
No fire lit the grate, leaving the room chilled despite fine draperies and thick carpets. At the sight of his mother’s portrait above the fireplace an irrational urge to throw a blanket over it seized him. She shouldn’t have to look down on this atrocity. He hooked his thumbs into the pocket of his waistcoat so the other man would not see that his hands were trembling.
He surveyed the scene again, forcing himself to look at the body with dispassion. He must be alert to anything that might help uncover who had done this.
The runner swaggered about the room as if he were strolling in Hyde Park. He bent over the corpse and plucked out the knife. The slight sucking sound as it exited the body caused Anthony’s stomach to heave. For a ghastly moment he feared he would be ill.
Intent on the knife he held to the light, Perkins seemed not to notice Anthony’s discomfort. “I’ll need t’ talk t’ the servants, of course.”
Anthony nodded to the butler who hovered anxiously behind him in the hall. “See to it, will you, Hemmings?” he said in a choked voice.
“Yes, sir.” Hemmings scuttled away.
“When did you find ’im, Lord Da—Graham?”
“I didn’t find him. The commotion woke me at about seven. I understand one of the maids took in his breakfast and found him then.”
“When did you see ’im last?” Perkins scrutinized Anthony.
“I spoke to him shortly before I left for the Cornwallis’s ball last night. Around nine o’clock.”
“Did ’is Lordship act scared or upset?”
“Perhaps a little distracted, but certainly not as if he expected to be murdered.” Anthony eyed the runner as if he were a particularly loathsome insect. How could anyone believe that he would not have done everything in his power to have prevented the murder if he’d had any inkling that such a potential existed? “If he had been upset, I would have inquired as to the reason.”
Perkins met his gaze then nodded, apparently choosing to ignore Anthony’s sharpness. “What did you speak of with the ol’ gent before you left?”
“I wished him a good night and reminded him I’d be out late. Is that relevant?”
“You didn’t see him when you got home?” Perkins knelt beside the bed and looked beneath.
“As I said, I stayed out late. I supposed he had long since been in bed.”
The runner paced the room. “Did you see or hear anythin’ out o’ the way?”
“I wish to God I had. I could have intervened.” Anthony couldn’t keep the misery from his voice. He’d failed his father at the hour of his most desperate need.
“You recognize the knife?” Perkins held the blade up for Anthony’s inspection.
The question gave Anthony a focus, enabling him to force away his guilt for the moment and think logically. He re-examined the knife. Minutely detailed in the pale ivory of the handle, a peacock unfurled its tail in challenge. “No, I don’t. It’s strange that a murderer would use so fine a weapon, and more so that he would leave it behind. Anyone would recognize it if they had seen it before.”
“You might be surprised,” Perkins snorted. “Who were your father’s enemies?”
Blood rushed to Anthony’s face. A hot defence of his father’s honour hovered on his lips. He breathed in through his nose. The man was only trying to perform his du
ties. “He had no enemies. There may have been a few men he quarrelled with over the years, but none with the kind of grudge that would lead to murder. My father was a generous landlord, and upright in his business dealings.”
The runner pushed his lips together and out, obviously unconvinced of the earl’s virtue. At least he had the sense to keep any arch comments to himself.
“I guess we’re done for now then, sir.” Scepticism flattened his voice. “Though I may need to speak with you later.”
Anthony nodded.
“Good. I need t’ see the staff now, starting with ’is valet.”
“I’d like to join you for these interviews.”
Perkins cleared his throat. “That isn’t a good idea, sir. The skivvies won’t wanna tell me a thing with you hovering nearby.”
Implacable, Anthony stepped forward. “They’ll understand I am interested only in finding my father’s murderer. I’ll make it clear that any minor indiscretions will be overlooked in exchange for their assistance in this matter.”
Perkins visibly weighed his options. Anthony smirked. He was the client—the one who would pay the bounty when the murderer was caught. With a heavy sigh, Perkins conceded the point, apparently deciding to save his clout for when it might really be required.
Anthony led the way to the drawing room where he rang for his father’s valet. He gestured for the runner to sit and took the seat opposite him on the settee, then stood again. Repose did not suit his humour. He paced near the fireplace, extending his hands to the flames.