Great Historical Novels (52 page)

BOOK: Great Historical Novels
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Juliette didn’t bother to hide her tears, and now Eliza was weeping as well and dabbing her eyes with her crochet.

‘I think I know what John Hannam was up to when your father found the banknotes hidden in the barn, Juliette,’ said Dillon. ‘I’ve acquired some old newsprint from around Manchester. There was a racket that made the papers, involving forged banknotes being exchanged for coin. Each exchange took place in a different part of the city and at a different bank.
More than three thousand pounds was extorted in and around Manchester over two years.’

This, Dillon argued, was the means by which John Hannam had transformed himself into Jonathan Montgomery, a little-known cloth magnate from an aristocratic northern family. It was an easy task to seduce London society; it only took money, which allowed one to marry into more money. No doubt Prunella had been hoodwinked like everyone else, charmed by the art of manners and the attentions of a handsome man. Then there was Francis Beckwith’s beautiful copperplate. Rhia had thought it ill-suited to his character, but it was well suited to a forger. She should have suspected him immediately she saw the handwriting on Jerusalem calling card.

Rhia looked at Dillon. He and Michael were making preparations to leave, as though an unspoken message had passed between them. And it was not just a room full of weeping women that was calling them away.

Sid noticed too. ‘I’m coming,’ he said.

‘And I,’ Isaac added. Antonia was still holding onto his arm. He looked at her kindly. ‘If you’ll be all right on your own?’

‘Heavens!’ she said indignantly, ‘I have a business and a household to run. I don’t have time to swoon.’

Isaac smiled and his face changed. He was looking at Antonia with such tenderness that Rhia looked away. Why had she not noticed it before?

‘We could do with the extra men,’ Michael agreed.

Dylan nodded. ‘I’ll take Isaac’s chaise and call at the Westminster station on the way to Regent Street. I imagine they’ll spare a couple of constables if I ask nicely. They like to have something to wave their truncheons at.’

‘Montgomery could be at Belgravia,’ Sid said.

‘I’m coming with you,’ Rhia said, preparing to stand her
ground. She caught Dillon’s eye. He opened his mouth to protest, hesitated and then nodded. Michael looked at her sharply and she returned the look. He shrugged. ‘I’m not going to argue with you, I can see there’s no point. I suppose it’s your right to accuse the man who did that to your hair.’

‘Off we go then!’ Sid rubbed his hands together, and then buttoned up his waistcoat and straightened his cap as if he was off to the music hall.

Leather

It was agreed, en route, that Sid would go into the House of Montgomery on his own first, to see if Mr Montgomery was there. Rhia wouldn’t set foot in the place without good cause, and as far as she was concerned no cause was good enough. She didn’t much care to see Grace, either.

The Regent Street hackney stand was just outside the em - porium and fate and fortune were riding with them because a carriage pulled away just as they arrived. Sid disappeared into the emporium, and Rhia watched from the carriage while Michael and Isaac stood on the footpath outside. Michael looked like he’d stepped out of another time, with his thick linen shirt and rough wool breeches. He leant on a lamp-post smoking and watching the bustle of the street. Isaac stood talking to him. They made an unlikely pair, the Quaker and the dissenter. They barely attracted a curious glance, though, amongst Londoners.

Ladies went in and came out. Rhia saw a ghost of herself entering through the same door in her red cloak a lifetime ago. She hardly knew that Rhia now. She had thought herself so fine and worldly.

Sid came out after a few minutes and they climbed back into the carriage. ‘Grace says her boss is at Belgrave Square,’ he said. ‘But we’d best wait for Mr Dillon before we set off.’ They waited, each lost in their own thoughts.

‘Grace decided to stay at the emporium, then?’ Rhia asked Sid.

‘That’s right. She said she saw no reason why she shouldn’t keep her position just because we were being married. I wonder who might have put that idea into her head, Miss Mahoney?’

All around the sanctuary of their carriage, London jostled and shouted and hurried as though this were just any other day. It could take some time for Mr Dillon to arrive if the roads were this busy all the way from Westminster. Everywhere Rhia looked, now, she saw the ghosts of parts of her; young women in crinoline cages in awe of the fancy shops, as though this place might magically turn them into someone other than who they were. She no longer felt in awe of the capital, she might be
in
it, but she was not
of
it. She could almost hear Mamo, chuckling, at her shoulder.

Isaac’s chaise stopped beside them, accompanied by two constables on horseback. Mr Dillon sat on the hammercloth holding the reins. His hair was loose and he was wearing a shallow-brimmed black hat and his leather coat. He looked like he was ready for anything. After a short conference they agreed on their plan and set off again.

All the way to Belgravia, Rhia felt her anger building as she thought about Mr Montgomery, the man she had wanted to impress. The man whom she had admired. To think that she had even felt grateful to him! She wondered if he had offered her a position to find out exactly what she knew. He had probably never intended to use her designs.

They stopped beside a copse of trees a short distance from the Montgomery residence. The policemen would wait at the gates until they were called for. As agreed, Rhia and Isaac climbed the cold marble steps to the front entrance as though they were simply paying a visit. At the imposing black doors
that could hide anything, they stood still for a moment and looked at each other. Isaac smiled. Although he looked strained, he also seemed liberated; as though he, too, had been freed. They waited until Dillon, Michael and Sid had disappeared around the side of the building towards the servants’ and tradesmen’s entrance, then Isaac nodded.

Rhia lifted the heavy brass knocker.

The butler opened the door, a squat man with a dour expression and depressed air. ‘Yes,’ he said.

‘We are here to see Jonathan Montgomery,’ said Isaac.

‘I’m afraid the Montgomerys are dining, sir.’

Isaac nodded unsympathetically. ‘I suggest you interrupt their luncheon, then. Perhaps you could show us straight to the dining room?’

‘That is out of the question,’ the butler replied blandly.

‘I see,’ Isaac replied. ‘There are two constables waiting on the street, and I would prefer, at this stage, not to involve them.’ The butler’s grey eyebrows shot up and he looked over Rhia’s shoulder towards the gates. He stepped aside immediately to let them in.

Although the butler was hurrying, it seemed to take an age to reach the dining room, buried deep in the house. Blood-coloured walls and dark wainscoting rose on either side making Rhia claustrophobic. Her heart pounded. What if the others couldn’t find their way in, or got lost in the house?

‘There’s no need to announce us,’ said Isaac quietly, when they finally reached the right door. ‘And, if you don’t mind my offering you some advice, I suggest you hastily find yourself another employer.’ The poor man merely shook his head in confusion and hurried away.

The dining room was dim, the curtains almost fully drawn. Mr and Mrs Montgomery, Mr Beckwith and Isabella all sat at
one end of the long table. Two candelabras were lit as if it were a formal dinner.

When the door opened, they all looked up expectantly – as though their silence, rather than their conversation, had been interrupted. Prunella Montgomery looked dreadful. A strand of hair hung over her painted face, and even the most expensive powders and paints could not disguise the bloodless skin. The hand that clutched the stem of her claret glass had a visible tremor.

‘Miss Mahoney!’ Isabella stood up so quickly that she knocked her chair over. She ran across the room in a blur of buttermilk chiffon, and flung her arms around Rhia’s neck as though she were the dearest of long-lost friends. ‘I’m so pleased to see you! I didn’t know you were in London!’ She turned to her father. ‘Papa! Have you kept it a secret from me? Is Rhia to come back to work at the emporium?’

‘No,’ said Rhia, ‘I am not.’ Isabella was playing the ingénue. Perhaps she always had. Her eyes had a desperate look that told worlds more than her incessant, meaningless chatter. Isabella knew, as everyone in the room knew, that something was wrong.

Mr Montgomery and Beckwith were on their feet, ostensibly polite, but Beckwith’s usually impassive expression had a new alertness. The only person who barely stirred was Prunella, who took a large swallow of claret, then picked up a piece of bread and nibbled on it as though things were perfectly normal.

Mr Montgomery bowed, and smiled his captivating smile, but it was a mask and he was clearly on guard.

‘Good afternoon, Isaac! What a surprise. And Miss Mahoney, how … delightful to see you returned to us safely.’ He could not have looked less delighted.

‘Greetings, Jonathan,’ said Isaac. He frowned, choosing his
words slowly and carefully. ‘We thought we’d call since your name came up today. Twice. Once in association with a counterfeiting racket in Sydney and once in connection with a murder.’ Rhia had not expected Isaac to be so daring. She thought he would be careful until the rest of their party arrived.

Mr Montgomery kept smiling as though Isaac was playing some kind of prank. But his eyes darted to Beckwith, who put his hand on his waistcoat pocket. Beckwith was on edge, and for the first time Rhia saw that he was not, after all, a passive man. He suddenly looked as mean as a cornered stoat. No one moved or said anything.

Rhia noticed a movement out of the corner of her eye. The door opened and Michael, Dillon and Sid entered. They could have been waiting at the door for any length of time. Beckwith slid his hand into his pocket and pulled out a black pistol, which he pointed at Rhia. He wasn’t looking at her, though, he was looking at Michael. Michael was holding his knife.

‘You’d all best be leaving now,’ Beckwith said slowly. His voice chilled Rhia more than the sight of his gun pointed at her breast. She had hardly heard Beckwith speak before, and now she knew why. Unlike Mr Montgomery, he had a distinctly northern accent. Did a bullet kill one instantly, or would she bleed to death? Ryan’s prone body was like a photogenic drawing in her mind. Michael’s knife was a primitive-looking weapon; it was the colour of ivory, and it had saw-like serrations an inch down either side of its deadly sharp point. It was aimed at Beckwith. ‘I learnt to throw a knife from a real Australian,’ Michael said steadily. ‘They take aim at their prey while it’s moving and they never, ever, miss their mark.’

Dillon was watching Beckwith, his eyes darted to Rhia; a wordless supplication to stay perfectly still. As if she wouldn’t. She was made of stone.

The only sound was Isabella’s soft whimpering. Prunella had put down her glass. Beckwith’s hand stayed steady, pointing the pistol at her. Mr Montgomery’s eyes were darting about as though searching for an escape route. There wasn’t one. Sid, who’d rolled up his sleeves, blocked the door. He had his hands on his hips and he was leaning forwards slightly, like a rugby player hoping for a scuffle.

If she didn’t say anything now, she may not have another opportunity.

‘Did you kill Ryan Mahoney, Mr Montgomery?’

Rhia heard Isabella catch her breath.

Montgomery looked at her, hard and cold. She’d seen this side of him before, she remembered, at Isabella’s party. Just a flash. But she had ignored it because she had been so taken in by the mask of success and respectability. ‘I did not,’ he said.

She nodded. ‘Not personally. But it was your idea.’ She looked at Beckwith. ‘You shot him. You pointed that pistol at him, didn’t you?’ She marvelled at the steadiness of her own voice, as though it were coming from someone else entirely. Beckwith said nothing. He was not fool enough to admit to murder in the company of so many. His eyes strayed for only a second to Montgomery’s though, and that was all it took. In a moment, Michael’s knife was hurtling across the room. It hit Beckwith’s forearm. The pistol dropped to the floor with a clatter and the arm that had been holding it was now hanging limply. The knife twisted and fell, but it had done its work. Beckwith groaned with pain and clutched his forearm with his other hand. His shirtsleeve was already soaked in blood. Michael moved quickly and took hold of him by his good arm. Montgomery made a move towards the door but Isaac stepped in front of him.

‘Since we’re all here,’ said Dillon, ‘I’d like to take a stab – no pun intended, Mr Beckwith – at what inspired the coining
racket. I’d say you’ve had your work cut out, John Hannam, keeping up appearances and running a mercer’s on Regent Street, not to mention a house in Belgravia, though I imagine your good wife’s money has helped. Still, with the silver crisis and the downturn in trade, not to mention the shortage of China silk, you must have needed an injection of funds to keep up appearances. Lucky you had the benefit of a criminal past, isn’t it? Oh, and did I say we know who John Hannam is?’

‘I’ve no idea what you’re talking about and I certainly don’t have to tell you anything about my business affairs,’ Montgomery spat, his face so twisted with resentment that it was hard to believe he was the genteel mercer whose lunch had been interrupted.

‘Quite right, you don’t. We have enough evidence. We even have Josiah Blake’s letter, but you may have thought Rhia or Laurence had that anyway?’

Mr Montgomery looked as though he would happily kill Dillon as well, but he was outnumbered. He was white with fury, or fear, and he was visibly perspiring.

Prunella Montgomery picked up her wine glass. ‘It seems that you’ve been found out, my dear. I knew some of it, of course, though I didn’t imagine … this.’ She flung her hand out in a wide gesture that almost knocked over one of the candelabras. ‘A man cannot hide his true self from his wife, Jonathan. You’ve become careless. I might be a tippler, but I’m not entirely without sensibility. Not yet.’ She looked away from him in disgust. ‘When he is alone with Francis, he is not so careful of his manners,’ she said, to no one in particular. ‘I suppose I have wondered how long it would be before he went too far. And that nice young man …’ She shook her head.

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