Read What Darkness Brings Online
Authors: C. S. Harris
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical, #Amateur Sleuth
Chapter 22
S
eb
astian was careful to wait until after twelve o’clock to pay a call on the Park Street home of his aunt, the Dowager Duchess of Claiborne. The house was not, technically, the property of the Dowager but belonged to her son, the present Duke of Claiborne. But the Duke, a stout, mild-mannered man well into his middle years, knew himself to be no match for his formidable mother. Rather than assert his rights of ownership, he simply lived with his growing family in a much smaller house in Half Moon Street, leaving Henrietta in possession of the grand pile over which she had reigned as mistress for more than half a century.
Born Lady Henrietta St. Cyr, the elder sister of the current Earl of Hendon, she was one of the few people who knew that she was not actually Sebastian’s aunt, although the world believed her to be. But neither Sebastian nor Henrietta was the type to allow technicalities to interfere in their affections.
He found her seated at her breakfast table, a half-eaten piece of toast and a cup of tea before her. Like her brother, she was big boned and fleshy, with a broad, plain face and the piercing blue eyes that were the hallmark of the St. Cyr family. She had never been a pretty woman, even when young. But she was every inch the earl’s daughter and made a splendid duchess. Always exquisitely groomed and imperious in manner, she was one of the grandes dames of society. And if at all possible she never left her dressing room before one o’clock.
“Good heavens, Aunt,” said Sebastian, bending to kiss her rouged cheek. “The clocks have barely struck twelve and I find you already on the verge of setting forth into the world. How . . . dreadfully unfashionable.”
She rapped him affectionately on the ear, chuckling as she straightened the towering purple turban he’d knocked slightly askew. “Impertinent jackanapes. As it happens, I did not sleep well last night. All that banging and booming; I swear it was enough to wake the dead. Now, stop looming over me and sit down and tell me why you are here. No, don’t bring him a cup of tea, you foolish man,” she told the hapless footman who was about to do just that. “Get him some ale.”
Sebastian drew out the seat beside her. “What makes you so certain I’m not here simply for the pleasure of your company?”
“Because I know you. And because I read the papers.” She paused, a hint of apprehension tightening the lines around her mouth. Henrietta might be leery of his recent marriage to the daughter of Lord Jarvis, but she had never approved of his relationship with Kat either. Sebastian knew she would frown on anything likely to bring him once more into the orbit of his ex-mistress.
She leaned forward, her gaze hard on his face. “But first, I want you to tell me how your new bride gets on. Is she well?”
“Hero? I doubt she’s ever been sick in her life. I wanted to ask—”
“I saw her in Bond Street the other day,” said Henrietta, ignoring his attempt to change the subject. “She looked ravishing—positively
glowing
, in fact, which is not a word I ever thought I would use to describe Hero Jarvis. She’s not by chance increasing, is she?” She looked at him archly.
Sebastian stared back at her. Her capacity to ferret out other people’s secrets had always struck him as bordering on the uncanny. He said, “Bit soon for that, isn’t it?”
“Is it?”
Sebastian paused while her man placed a tankard of ale before him, then drank deeply. “I’m here to ask what you can tell me about the Hopes.”
A faint, enigmatic smile touched her lips. She took a delicate sip of her tea, then said, “Which ones?”
“Henry Philip and Thomas.”
“Ah. Well, there isn’t much to say about Henry Philip. He’s never married, you know, and seldom ventures out into company. Queer little man.”
“I understand he’s something of a gem collector.”
“He is, yes. I’ve heard it said he has the largest private collection of jewels in Europe, although I’ve never seen it personally.”
“What about Thomas? Does he share his brother’s interest in gems?”
“Not to my knowledge. Oh, he buys the odd piece for that wife of his.” Henrietta’s nose quivered in a way that told him Louisa Hope was not one of her favorites. “But for the most part he fancies himself something of an antiquary and patron of the arts.”
“Tell me about his wife.”
“Louisa de la Poer Beresford. Her uncle is the Earl of Tyrone and the Marquis of Waterford.”
“And her father?”
“Some clergyman. In Ireland, of all places.”
“So Thomas Hope was quite a catch for her.”
“He was, yes. Although I’ve heard there were tears when the match was first suggested to her.”
“He is rather . . . unattractive. Even if he is staggeringly rich.”
“True. But I believe there was more to it than that. She had formed a previous attachment to someone who was most unsuitable—a by-blow of her uncle or some such thing. There was no question of the family ever allowing anything to come of
that
. So in the end she gave up and married Hope.”
“Admirable,” said Sebastian with heavy sarcasm.
His aunt frowned at him. “Realistic.”
“A pity she doesn’t appear to have much of a fondness for Egyptian sarcophagi—or for Thomas Hope, for that matter.”
“Indeed. I fear she has turned into one of those females who seems to believe that just because they are unhappy they must needs devote their lives to an attempt to make the rest of the world miserable, as well.”
Sebastian smiled. “Not fond of the Society for the Suppression of Vice, are you, Aunt?”
“I always say there’s nothing wrong with a bit of vice as long as it’s not taken to the extreme. Give me someone with a touch of vice over someone with an excess of sanctimonious hypocrisy any day.”
He laughed and took another swallow of ale. “I understand she has a young cousin staying with her from Ireland. Have you met him?”
Henrietta’s scowl cleared. “I have, yes. Blair Beresford. Charming young man. As attractive as his cousin but with none of Louisa’s self-righteous drivel. I must say, however, that I do not care for that military man he has taken up with.”
“You mean Lieutenant Tyson?”
“I do, yes. He may be a fine figure of a man, and I know the Tysons are an old, respected Hereford family. But there’s something not quite right about him. And don’t ask me to explain it, because I can’t.”
She drained her teacup, set it aside, then fixed him with a level stare. “Now, not another word will you get out of me until you tell me how the Hopes could possibly be involved in Eisler’s murder. And there is no point in trying to deny that’s what this is all about, because I know you.”
“I don’t know that they are involved.”
“Huh. Well, I certainly trust you don’t intend to start suspecting everyone who ever bought jewels from that dreadful man.”
“Good heavens,” said Sebastian, opening his eyes a little wider. “Aunt Henrietta. What did you buy from him?”
She put up a hand to straighten her turban again, although it was not in need of adjustment. “That lovely little diamond bracelet I wore to the Queen’s Drawing Room recently—the one Claiborne made such a fuss over when he saw it. Mind you, I didn’t deal with Eisler directly. But I had no doubt where the piece came from.”
“So with whom did you deal?”
“A lapidary named John Francillon. He has an establishment on the Strand. I actually saw him there a few days ago.”
“You mean you saw Francillon?”
“No. I mean that I saw Eisler in Francillon’s shop.”
“What day was this?”
“Saturday, I believe. The two were huddled together in the back when I first walked in. I wouldn’t have paid much attention if Eisler hadn’t been acting positively furtive about the entire affair.”
Sebastian smiled. “So naturally then you did pay attention.”
“I did, yes. Although I managed to get only a glimpse of the stone involved—what looked like an enormous blue sapphire. After Eisler left, I asked Francillon if the item was for sale. He became quite flustered when he realized I’d seen it and begged me not to tell anyone about it. Which I would not have done,” she added, “if Eisler weren’t dead.”
Sebastian stood and planted a loud kiss on her cheek. “Aunt Henrietta, I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
“Where are you going?” she asked as he headed for the door.
“To pay a call on your Mr. Francillon.”
C
hapter 23
T
he rain started up again long before Sebastian reached the Strand, the low-hanging clouds robbing the city of color to leave only gray: gray wet streets, flat gray light, gray sky. The air was heavy with the dank scent of wet stone and coal smoke and the pungent odors of the nearby river.
Leaving his horses in Tom’s care, Sebastian ducked beneath a trim black awning with the name
FRANCILLON
neatly lettered in gold. He pushed open the door, the shop bell jangling. An older man behind the counter paused in the act of hanging a botanical illustration of an exotic lily and turned.
He looked to be somewhere in his late sixties, his dark hair silvered at the temples, although his movements were full of energy, his small, wiry form still trim and upright. He had the high forehead, tight lips, and thin Gallic nose of his ancestors, French Huguenots who had fled their homeland after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes more than a hundred years before. The Francillons had plied their trade in London for generations, yet his voice still carried a faint inflection when he asked, “May I help you?”
Sebastian went to rest his hands on the counter and lean into them. “My name is Devlin. I’m looking into the circumstances surrounding Daniel Eisler’s death, and I’m interested in the large blue diamond he was selling. I understand you saw it.”
Something flickered in the depths of the Huguenot’s pale brown eyes, only to be quickly hidden when he lowered his lashes. “I’m sorry, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“You’re quite certain of that?”
“Yes.”
Sebastian let his gaze travel, deliberately, around the small shop. A variety of gems, some cut, polished, and set, others still in the rough, crowded the cases. But the walls above were filled with paintings of birds and insects and shadow boxes displaying everything from exotic beetles to enormous, brilliantly colored butterflies. Francillon might have been trained as a lapidary, but his interests obviously included all aspects of natural history.
Sebastian said, “I would imagine the prosperity of an establishment such as this relies quite heavily on its reputation for honesty and integrity. Unfortunately, a good name, once lost, can be nearly impossible to reclaim.”
“Francillon has been a respected name for over a hundred—”
“So I am told. Which is why, I should think, it would be in your best interest not to have the name of your establishment linked to a notorious incident of theft and murder.”
The tactic was heavy-handed and crude, but effective. Francillon stared back at him, his jaw set hard, his voice tight with suppressed indignation. “Precisely what do you wish to know about the stone?”
“First of all, I’m curious as to why Eisler brought it to you.”
“I was asked to prepare an illustrated sales prospectus.”
“And did you?”
“I did.”
“What exactly does that involve?”
“Generally? Tracing around the stone, weighing it, and preparing a colored rendering. In this case, both a plan and an elevation.”
“So you can describe it to me.”
“I could. However, I am not entirely convinced that I should.”
Once more, Sebastian let his gaze drift significantly around the shop.
Francillon cleared his throat. “The specimen in question was a brilliant-cut diamond of an extraordinary shade of sapphire blue, unset at the time of my inspection and weighing in at over forty-five carats.”
It was the first real confirmation Sebastian had received that such a diamond actually existed. He said, “To whom was Eisler planning to sell it?”
“I do not know. I was not made privy to that information.”
“Did he mention where it came from?”
“He did not.”
“But you have some ideas, don’t you?” said Sebastian, watching the lapidary’s face.
Francillon swallowed but remained silent.
Sebastian said, “I’m told large blue diamonds are quite rare. So rare in fact that an experienced lapidary such as yourself would surely be aware of all such gems in existence.”
“I am unaware of any forty-five-carat blue diamond in any known collections.”
“What about a collection that has been lost?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“The French Blue was a large, sapphire-hued diamond, was it not? It disappeared along with the rest of the French Crown Jewels exactly twenty years ago this month. That doesn’t strike you as rather . . . coincidental?”
“The French Blue was larger—over sixty-seven carats. And of a different cut.”
“Diamonds can be recut, can’t they? It seems to me that anyone trying to sell the French Blue might well find it expedient to alter it.”
Francillon’s gaze met Sebastian’s before skittering away. “I don’t understand why you are here, asking me these questions.”
“I am here because Daniel Eisler is dead and I am beginning to believe it more and more likely that the French Blue had something to do with his murder.”
“But the authorities have already captured the man responsible!”
“They have committed a man to Newgate, yes. I don’t believe he’s guilty. And I have a fundamental objection to seeing innocent men hang.”
Francillon hesitated a moment, then reached below the counter to come up with a large folio, which he laid open atop the case. He flipped through the volume for a moment, as if looking for something, then swung the book around to face Sebastian. “There.” He pointed to a full-page colored illustration. “You see? Here is Louis XV’s insignia of the Golden Fleece.”
Sebastian found himself staring at a gaudy confection of gold and priceless gems. At the center of the piece coiled a magnificent red dragon exquisitely carved from a long oxblood-hued stone. Scores of what looked like small, clear diamonds formed the dragon’s wings and tail; above him rested an enormous clear hexagonal diamond, with a slightly smaller yellow stone above that. But the emblem’s true focus was the enormous deep sapphire blue diamond that nested in the tongues of flame shooting from the dragon’s mouth. From below that, nearly dwarfed by the big blue stone, dangled a golden ram, its fleece formed by dozens of small yellow stones set in gold.
“What’s the big clear diamond at the top, here?” asked Sebastian, pointing to it.
“That was called the Bazu. At nearly thirty-three carats, it was second in size only to the French Blue. The large yellow stones you see here”—he pointed to them—“and here are yellow sapphires, ten carats each. The five brilliant-cut diamonds were five carats each. And there were literally dozens of smaller stones. These here in the fleece were all yellow diamonds.”
“And none of these gems has ever been recovered?”
“Only the carved red dragon—known as the Côte de Bretagne. It was found almost by accident not long after the theft.”
“So we know the piece was broken up.”
“Yes.” Francillon closed the book and tucked it out of sight beneath the counter. “But you must understand that all of this is nothing more than sheer speculation on my part. Eisler said nothing—
nothing
—to lead me to suspect the diamond he showed me was the French Blue, recut.”
“Who was the sales prospectus intended for?”
“I told you, Eisler never said. But . . .”
“But?” prompted Sebastian.
“It is not hard to guess.”
“You mean Prinny, don’t you?”
Francillon shrugged and rolled his eyes but said nothing.
Sebastian studied the small Frenchman’s tightly held face. “When you first heard Eisler had been murdered, who did you think killed him?”
Francillon let out a startled huff of laughter. “You can’t be serious.”
“Oh, but I am.”
Francillon cleared his throat again and looked pointedly away. “Well, then, if you must know, I naturally assumed Perlman might have had something to do with it.”
“Who?”
“Samuel Perlman. Eisler’s nephew.”
“Isn’t he the nephew who found Russell Yates standing over Eisler’s body?”
“There is only the one nephew, which is why he is Eisler’s sole heir.”
“I didn’t know that.”
Francillon nodded. “He is Eisler’s sister’s son. Eisler never made any secret of the fact he despised the lad. He was always threatening to disinherit him and leave his money to charity.”
“Exactly what did Perlman do to incur his uncle’s displeasure?”
“Mr. Eisler always considered his nephew . . . profligate.”
“Is he?”
Francillon scratched the tip of his nose. “Let us say simply that Mr. Perlman’s attitudes toward money and expenditures were considerably different from Mr. Eisler’s own. But there was more to the disaffection than that. Mr. Eisler was also beyond incensed by the lad’s recent marriage. He actually told me on Saturday that it was the last straw with him. The last straw.”
“His wife is unsuitable?”
“Eisler considered her so.” A faint smile tightened the skin beside the lapidary’s eyes. “Her father is the Archbishop of Durham.”
“Ah,” said Sebastian. “Tell me: Was Mr. Perlman in any way involved in his uncle’s diamond business?”
Francillon shook his head. “I’d be surprised if Mr. Perlman ever expressed any desire to become involved. But even if he had, Eisler would never have agreed.”
“Because he considered his nephew incompetent? Or dishonest?”
“Because Mr. Eisler never trusted anyone, even his own kin. In my experience, we all view the world through the prism of our own behavior. If a man is honest, he generally assumes that those he meets will deal honestly with him. As a result, he trusts people and takes them at their word—even when he should not. Since he does not lie or cheat himself, it does not occur to him that others might lie or deceive him.”
“And Eisler?”
“Let’s just say that Daniel Eisler went through life in terror of being deceived.”
“Did anyone ever succeed in deceiving him?”
The smile lines beside the lapidary’s eyes deepened. “Even the wiliest of men are sometimes deceived. But if you are asking me for names, I can’t give you any. Eisler kept his secrets well.”
Sebastian inclined his head and turned toward the door. “Thank you for your help.”
Francillon bowed and went back to tidying the wall behind his cases.
Sebastian walked out of the shop and stood beneath the awning, looking out at the rain. A housemaid hurried past, a shawl drawn up over her head, her pattens clicking on the pavement; at the corner, an urchin with a broom was working hard at clearing a pile of wet manure from the street.
Sebastian turned and went back into the shop.
“Can you think of anyone Eisler was afraid of?”
Francillon looked around again, his face pinched with thought. Then he shook his head. “Only dead men.”
It struck Sebastian as a peculiar statement.
But no matter how he pressed Francillon, the lapidary refused to be drawn any further.