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Authors: Grace Burrowes

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Oxford probably had more pawnshops than London, Portsmouth, Yorkshire, and Brighton combined. When Abby considered the cracked hand mirror in her bedroom, she could think of no more fitting fate for Gregory’s little treasures. The staff would know how to get good coin for them too.

“Madam is most, exceedingly generous,” Shreve said, bowing. “I will take my leave, with heartfelt thanks, and unending wishes for madam’s continued well-being.”

He was doubtless off to relay the news of this windfall below stairs, but Abby had had a taste of interrogation and wasn’t about to let him go that easily.

“You can accompany me to the housekeeper’s sitting room,” she said, “and answer a few more questions along the way. Jeffries, Heath, you will begin the inventory of the colonel’s effects, find boxes for anything the staff doesn’t want, and for heaven’s sake, open the balcony doors and the rest of the windows. Airing these rooms will take an eternity.”

She left the footmen to their tasks, and preceded Shreve to the head of the main stairs.

“First question, Shreve: Was there anything else you did not share with Mr. Belmont that you wished to impart to me first?”

They were alone, Shreve was in Abby’s debt, he’d been given leave to flee the scene, and he had no motivation to lie. Still, he glanced about, as if the portraits had ears, or as if he’d promised himself that this question—
if asked
—he’d answer honestly.

“Madam should put the same inquiry to Mr. Ambers.”

Ambers had been very much Gregory’s creature. Abby crossed her arms. Shreve blushed a shade that would become one of Axel’s more robust roses.

“Madam might ask Ambers where the colonel went,” Shreve said, “the first Wednesday of every month, without fail.”

A mistress?
“Where do you suppose he went?”

“Oxford, based on the length of the appointment. If the colonel was unable to go, Ambers went alone.”

If Gregory went on horseback, Ambers would go to attend the horses, presumably.

“Why would Ambers go alone?”

Shreve looked as if he’d prefer to hurl himself down the staircase. “Perhaps to pay for the other party’s time?”

A mistress, then—may heaven keep the woman, whoever she was—but why hire a mistress when a young, all-too-accommodating wife resided on the premises?

“Anything else?”

“No, madam. If I do think of something, might I presume to write to you?”

The look in his faded blue eyes was a shock. Hopeful, worshipful even. Abby was abruptly glad he’d be removing to East Anglia, for such devotion might, indeed, have motivated murder.

“You’re better off writing to Mr. Belmont regarding particulars of the colonel’s death, though I hope you’ll send along a note at the holidays and assure me of your continued happy retirement.”

Shreve brightened. “Certainly, madam. Yuletide greetings by post are a fine old English custom.”

Well no, they were not, not that Abby knew of.

He followed her down the stairs, rather like one of the hounds Abby had evicted from the manor the day after Gregory’s death. To her great relief, Axel was coming up from the kitchen as she would have gone below stairs to chat with Mrs. Jensen.

“Shreve, if you’d have Mrs. Jensen meet me in my office, please?” Abby asked. “And safe journey. My thanks for your years of service to the colonel… and to me.”

Shreve bowed so low as to expose the very top of his shining, pink head, then took himself off.

“Damned if he isn’t smitten with you,” Axel muttered. “Matthew warned me there’s no predicting the course of an investigation.”

“Shreve can be smitten in East Anglia,” Abby said, mentally stripping the walls of Gregory’s blasted hunt scenes. “We’ll manage without a butler henceforth, or I can promote Jeffries to the position. While you interview Ambers, I’ll speak with Mrs. Jensen. The house is falling into a state, which will not do. Before one embarks on a redecoration, a house must be at least clean.”

Something she’d said had Axel smiling with his eyes, while his mouth remained a solemn, straight line.

“Don’t you want to know what was in the safe, Abigail?”

“I’m sure you have that all in hand, Mr. Belmont, though please ask Ambers where the colonel went the first Wednesday of every month without fail. If the colonel could not attend this errand, Ambers went in his stead. Shreve’s guess is Ambers went to pay for ‘the other party’s time.’”

Axel took her by the arm and escorted her—rather hurriedly—into the second parlor. The room was Abby’s favorite of the public chambers, all green and cream, soft velvets and framed cutwork, though today it was also chilly.

“What’s different about this room?” Axel asked, closing the door.

“The air doesn’t stink, for one thing. I redecorated it, for another. I asked Gregory’s permission, and he refused me. By then I’d been married well over a year, and I’d realized my husband had little patience for details. I presented him my monthly ledgers, which always balanced to the penny, and Gregory had no idea that instead of potatoes, I’d bought a few pounds’ worth of fabric.”

“Resourceful,” Axel said. “Resilient, and talented with a needle. Is that your cutwork?”

“I did that the first time Gregory went shooting in Yorkshire with Sir Dewey.”

Axel studied the frame, one of the many treasures Abby claimed to have “found in the attics.”

“Chestnut wood has a beautiful grain,” he said, “but Abigail, when did you plan to tell me that Gregory was poisoning you?”

Chapter Thirteen

A
bigail sank like dropped fruit onto an elegant little green chair by the cold hearth.

“Poisoning me?” The words came out in a whisper while her right hand went to her middle. Her left gripped the side of the chair, as if her seat might slide out from under her otherwise.

“You had no suspicion?” Axel asked. “Not the least inkling?”

She shook her head, while Axel wanted to kick something.

“I might be wrong, Abigail.” Except he wasn’t. He’d questioned Mrs. Jensen, who as housekeeper was also the first defense at Stoneleigh Manor against illness.

She’d confirmed Shreve’s assertion that Abby had suffered bouts of severe bowel trouble, along with a waning appetite, lack of energy, increasing pallor, and occasional faintness. Peppermint tea had become Abby’s choice unless the colonel would be served from the same pot.

“He had no opportunity to poison me,” Abby said. “We took breakfast and dinner together, usually. Sometimes luncheon as well. We ate the same foods, more or less, though of course not from the same plates.”

“Those meals
were
his opportunities, Abigail. Shreve said the colonel often fixed your tea.”

She wrinkled her nose. “And never got it right. A dash of sugar, I told him, over and over, and invariably, he’d heap sugar into each cup, then stand over me, smiling, until I had no choice but to—”

“But to consume poison. Your health doubtless improved when he went off shooting. Did the colonel ever suggest you use arsenic to maintain a pale complexion?”

She jerked to her feet, the movement putting Axel in mind of the night of the murder.

“No, he did not. Cosmetics were for vain women, in his estimation. I’d enjoyed good health until this past year. My spirits always improved when Gregory traveled, and when he came back from Melton last spring, I was predictably… dispirited. Over the summer, my mood did not improve. I began to have problems.”

Not arsenic then, or not undiluted arsenic, thank God. Gregory had chosen a slow poison, and those were the least effective. Had Abby’s symptoms comported with known botanical toxins Axel might have suspected something sooner, but lethal plants tended to kill quickly and with dramatic effect.

“How do you feel now?” For what mattered to Axel most—even more than finding Stoneleigh’s killer—was that Abby live to enjoy her widowhood, that she be well and happy and whole.

She looked around the room, her first successful rebellion against her husband’s tyranny.

“I feel tired much of the time, and as if I’m observing myself live a life I’d never planned. Foggy, forgetful, little appetite, though my outlook and my health seem to be improving the longer I’m widowed.”

Normal grief there—Axel hoped—and an indication that whatever poison had been attempted, Abby was recovering rapidly.

“Any other physical symptoms?”

She took down the cutwork and used a corner of the draperies to dust the glass and frame.

“My appetite is coming back. I’d attributed that to your scolding and your cook’s skill, but my own cook has no lack of ability. I was simply… not well.”

Cutwork required using a tiny pair of scissors to nibble and snip away at folded paper, until what resulted was more light and air than paper. Axel wanted to pitch Abby’s little creation against the hearthstones and wrap her in his arms for the next year. The colonel had been snipping away at Abby, at her health, her spirits, her very life, and the contents of the safe had revealed his motive for doing so.

Axel took the seat she’d vacated, a ridiculous little perch for a man his size.

“When was the last time Gregory spent the entirety of a hunt season here at Stoneleigh Manor?”

“Not until this year, not as long as we’d been married. I’d hoped he’d go north for the shooting as August approached, but no luck. I assumed Sir Dewey had refused to accompany him, or perhaps Gregory had tired of all that haring about. Gregory made a few trips to London, but he was never gone for more than a fortnight.”

During which brief intervals, Abby’s abused body would have struggled to recover from weeks of poison.

She rehung her cutwork, adjusting the frame exactly plumb.

Axel wanted to thank the person who’d killed Gregory Stoneleigh, also to break something. He fell back instead on his classroom skills.

“I’ve a few suggestions, Abigail, if you will tolerate a small lecture?”

“Very small. Violent hysterics have become an attractive possibility, Mr. Belmont.”

Axel rose and studied the painting over the mantel, when he wanted instead to take Abby in his arms.

“I’ve found that in matters of plant toxicity, the body often knows what antidotes are most appropriate. Though your health does appear to be improving, if you crave peppermint, swill peppermint tea without limit. If an odd preference for ginger marmalade befalls you, have it at every meal. Trust your gustatory instincts, and you might come right very quickly.”

Abby wrapped her arms around him, which helped… a little. “I’ve been sleeping much more at Candlewick than I ever did here. Sleeping better too.”

Dreaming even. Axel took comfort from that. “Our investigation has grown more complicated, Abigail. Matthew says that’s an encouraging sign.”

“You’re not encouraged. You miss your roses.” She withdrew and took a seat on the green velvet sofa, though her black velvet skirts against the green sofa was a jarring combination. “I’m sorry, Axel. I wish Shreve had presented you with a signed confession, and you could leave me here, tossing Gregory’s effects and ripping his damned hunt scenes from the walls.”

She was
sorry
; Axel was damned glad she was alive, but those words would not aid her to regain her composure.

“You chose the art in here?” Over the sideboard hung a still life of polished red apples in a green crockery bowl with a sheaf of yellow chrysanthemums in the foreground. Above the fireplace in a simple wood frame, a cat napped on a hearthrug near a wicker knitting basket, a fire blazing in the background.

“I conspired with Lavinia. I chose the art in Oxford, had the paintings sent to her from the shops, then had her send them here as examples of her work. Gregory could not deny me the right to display them. He even took one of my selections to hang in the alcove outside his apartments—another portrait of a napping cat, of all things. I’m very fond of the hydrangeas that hang in my office. I cannot believe my own husband…”

She trailed off, her gaze going to the cat above the mantel. Abby’s choice of art had been prosaic, comforting, and well-executed. As rebellions went, the paintings were a brilliant place to start, though the parlor was as yet dusty, cold, and unused.

And Axel needed to be away from this place where yet more of Gregory Stoneleigh’s evil had come to light.

“You have a conservatory,” he said. “Suppose you show it to me.”

“Hadn’t we better spend the time questioning Ambers? I’d like to know where Gregory went on those regular appointments.”

She’d probably like to establish a pension for any woman who’d spared her Gregory’s attentions, and doubtless Ambers was waiting at that moment in the servants’ hall for Axel’s summons.

But Matthew had said that haste was the enemy of a successful investigation, and Axel needed to consider what he’d learned over the past two hours.

Questioning Ambers again could wait one more day. “A conservatory can take years to put to rights, Abigail. Best let me have a look now. We haven’t much more light.”

And Axel didn’t want to put her through another upsetting interview with a servant. Let Ambers leave the shire or worry himself into a confession, if a confession there was to make.

Which Axel doubted. Again, Ambers had no obvious motive, and years upon years of much better opportunity than late one January night in the colonel’s own home, drat the luck.

The conservatory was a cavernous waste of cold, damp, and poorly sealed glass, an altogether dreary place at the back of the house. Most estates would fill their conservatories over the winter months—conserving delicate species in cold weather being the intended use of same. Save for a few potted ferns and an anemic banyan tree, the Stoneleigh conservatory was empty.

Not a rose, not a damned pansy, to be seen.

“I’ll make you some sketches,” Axel said. “A deal of work is needed to set this place to rights.”

In the gathering gloom of an advancing winter afternoon, a shadow passed through Abigail’s eyes. Axel had said something amiss, or she’d recalled the latest of the revelations resulting from Stoneleigh’s murder.

Axel paced away from her, lest he wrap her in his arms and never let go. “You think somebody killed the colonel to protect you?”

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