"What about the butler?" Daniel wanted to know. "It's always the butler, isn't it, except when it is a jealous spouse."
"Hareston is a fussy, sneaky sort, who would never have left the gun on the floor."
"Perhaps you surprised him and he panicked."
"But why would he shoot his employer, putting himself out of work?"
"Why indeed?" Rex asked, searching in the countess's escritoire for a pencil and paper. He ignored the small packet of letters tied with a blue ribbon in one of the upper drawers. They looked suspiciously like the twice yearly letters of obligation he had sent in reply to birthday and Christmas gifts. He slammed that drawer shut and found what he wanted in a lower one. "And we can leave your stepsister and her aunt off the list because I understand they stayed on at Almack's until someone sent for them, after the Watch arrived. Odd."
"No, I doubt they noticed I was gone."
"That caring of you, eh?" Daniel wanted to know, looking like thunderclouds. He would not have let his sister out of his sight in London.
"My stepsister was too excited about her first evening at Almack's, and her aunt, Miss Hermione Hawley, Sir Frederick's sister, was sitting with the chaperones, scrutinizing the eligible bachelors. Elaine cares for me."
"Yet she did not help you when you were arrested." That was a statement from Lord Rexford, not another question.
Amanda glared at him. "She is seventeen. What should she have done? And her father was dead, horribly. I think someone told me that she and Miss Hawley left London the next day, conveying the baronet's body to his family's cemetery in Hampshire."
"Very well, they are not suspects or witnesses. Why do you not start in the beginning."
"But I have told my story over and over again. Surely you have heard all the details from the newspaper and the servants and town gossip."
Daniel was nodding, but Rexford did not pay attention, making notations on his pad. "I need to hear it from your own mouth because proving innocence in this case is going to be far harder than proving guilt."
"But I did not commit the crime!"
"I know." He touched her hand, then jerked his away, as if he had not meant to touch her. "But think on this. What, say, if your pearls were in question? You can prove you have a set by the necklace itself, or a bill of sale."
"They were my mother's."
"A will, then, or a houseful of servants recalling them. Easy proof. But what if someone said you had a diamond necklace?"
"I do not. Sir Frederick sold it and my mother's other jewelry, to pay for her doctors, he claimed."
"Ah, but you could have sold the necklace, or tossed it in the dustbin. Then it would be your word against the prosecutor's case."
Amanda fingered the pearls at her throat. "I see."
He nodded. "The negative is far harder to prove, but it is not impossible. Now start at the beginning of the unfortunate events. No, start with your life with Sir Frederick and his household."
So Amanda told him about her mother's marriage, her fading away, and Sir Frederick's anger. She told about his misappropriating of her inheritance and stealing her dowry, and how she was relegated to a poor companion in the house.
Daniel asked, "Why did you not leave? My aunt would have taken you in."
"And left little Elaine to face her father's rages, his skimping on her clothes and education and even simple entertainments? I could not abandon her when she was so young."
"Admirable, I am sure," Lord Rexford said, "but then she grew up enough to enter the Marriage Mart."
"Yes, her father wanted her to marry a title. She liked the idea of becoming a marchioness or a duchess."
"Not likely, a filly coming from that stable."
Rex frowned at his cousin's interruption. "Go on."
"With Elaine grown and her father attending to her future, I hoped to marry myself. Sir Frederick swore none of my suitors was good enough. In fact, that very afternoon he admitted that he would never part with my dowry. I was not of age yet, and he would see it diminished to nothing by my twenty-fifth birthday. My inheritance was already gone, he said, for my upkeep." She ignored Daniel Stamfield's angry mutterings and watched Lord Rexford add another note to his list. When he looked up, she continued. "I thought a particular gentleman of my acquaintance would not care about the money. He was well-off, and had expressed his interest."
"Did you speak with him that night at Almack's? Was that why you left so precipitously?"
"Yes, and yes." Amanda bit her lip while the two gentlemen waited. She told them about Mr. Charles Ashway and her expectations. Her voice trembled when she spoke of receiving the cut direct from him.
Amanda swore the floorboards shivered when Mr. Stamfield jumped to his feet. "That cad. I shall call him out for you, Miss Carville. No gentleman leads a lady to await an offer, and then treats her so abysmally."
"He had his reasons. I demanded an explanation, you see." She blushed and stared at her hands, but she managed to whisper the slander Sir Frederick had told Charles.
"And he believed your stepfather's lies? Anyone can tell you are a lady, not any barque of frailty. I will not bother challenging the mawworm, then, I shall just pound him into the ground. Dueling is illegal anyway."
Amanda had to smile. "I thank you for the thought, Mr. Stamfield. I wished to hit him myself."
Rex wanted to wring the dastard's neck, but that was for another time. "You must have been furious."
"Oh, I was worse than angry. I wanted to shout and stamp my foot and throw that insipid orgeat they serve right at him. But there was Elaine to consider. Besides, I knew Mr. Ashway was not the culprit. He simply did not trust me, and he cared more for his family name than he did for me."
Daniel sat back down. "That whole family is a bunch of bobbing blocks. You are better off without him."
Rex thought so, too. "Go on."
In firmer tones, Amanda told them, "My stepfather was entirely to blame. So I went home, alone, to confront him once and for all. I was going to go to the solicitor's in the morning, and the bank. And I intended to write to Lady Royce in Bath, asking her advice and assistance. I hated Sir Frederick more than I thought possible at that moment, and I did wish him dead."
"Perhaps you ought to keep that thought to yourself from now on," Rex warned. "Not that wishes equate to deeds, but it looks bad." He asked the name of her bank and which solicitor handled the family's affairs, then brought her attention back to Sir Frederick. "He must have been upset when you said you were going to expose his thievery. That would not have helped his daughter make an advantageous match."
"I did not get the chance to threaten him. He was already dead."
"So there was no struggle, no physical violence on his part?"
"No." In a voice as thin as a thread, she repeated, "He was already dead."
"Then how did you happen to have the gun in your hand?"
"I thought he was in his cups and had dropped it. I wanted to protect the rest of the household." She paused. "Then I saw him."
Rex saw her shudder and exchanged a glance with his cousin. "There is no need to tell us more. We can speak to the coroner for the rest. You had cause to shoot the dastard but you did not."
Now Amanda started crying again. "You truly believe me?"
"Of course. True-blue, like I said."
"No one else did."
"Well, we shall have to change their minds. Let us start with the gun. Was it Sir Frederick's?"
"I have no idea. I know he owned a brace of pistols because he mentioned shooting at Manton's Gallery a few times, but I never saw them."
"Can you describe the murder weapon at all?"
"It was cold and gray and heavy."
"No pearl handles or carvings? Some pistols have fancy work on them."
"I did not notice. I was too angry, and then…"
"Yes." Rex made a note on his paper to examine the gun, and to check at Manton's. "Sometimes they can be identified by their markings. A gunsmith will recognize his own work and recall who bought it. A weapons dealer might have records of the purchase. We'll start there. Now, who else would have been at the house that evening?"
He wrote down the servants she mentioned, noting that they had been given an evening off, with the ladies at the assembly rooms. "Sir Frederick did not sound like the type to be generous to his staff."
"I was surprised, but glad for them."
"It might be that Hawley was expecting company he wished to keep private."
"A whore?" Daniel asked, then blushed and begged Amanda's pardon.
"Or a partner in more shady dealings. We can easily find the men he drank with and gamed with at his clubs. We'll need the names of his friends, his investment advisors, his tailor." Rex turned the page and added more avenues to pursue.
"What the deuce do you want to know his tailor for? I can give you the name of mine if you want to cut a dash."
Rex raised his eyebrow at his cousin's ensemble. "I want to know if the baronet paid his debts. A man's tailor can tell a lot, if he wishes. So can his valet. Where was his man that evening?"
"I do not know. I think I saw him in all the confusion, after." She gave him Brusseau's name.
"Another French valet? Hmm."
"Do not make too much of it, coz. French servants are all the thing; the Quality think it gives them style."
"Did Sir Frederick dress in the latest fashions?"
Amanda and Daniel both shook their heads.
"What of Sir Frederick's son?"
"I do not know Edwin Hawley's mode of dress or if he has a valet. Edwin and his father were estranged. He moved out several years ago and I have not seen him since. I believe him to be residing at Hawk Hill, the Hawley seat in Hampshire. Sir Frederick hated the country and bled the estate to finance his investments. He could not sell the entailed property, or cast Edwin out of the succession to the baronetcy, of course, although the servants hinted that Sir Frederick borrowed heavily against the income. I thought they must have argued over the rents and mortgages but I never knew."
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