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Authors: Alyssa Maxwell

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BOOK: Murder at the Breakers
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“All right, yes. There are several people who I believe had motive and opportunity, but I won’t tell you who.” She looked about to object, so I added, “I won’t tell anyone until I have more proof. I wouldn’t want to accuse an innocent person. That would be as wrong and as damaging as the accusations against Brady.”

“I suppose you’re right. And you must have a care, Emma.” Her sudden earnestness surprised me. “Not only for those who might be wrongly accused, but for yourself. You’re right—this isn’t a detective novel, and the guilty party won’t appreciate your snooping around in his business.”

Those words sent a chill down my back, but I snapped my face toward hers and met her gaze head-on. “I’m not afraid of anyone, Adelaide. No one is going to stop me from uncovering the truth. Not the murderer, not the police, not Uncle Cornelius.”

We passed the Newport Casino, and soon the storefronts gave way to summer-lush trees and the hedge-lined walls of Bellevue Avenue’s mansions. We were nearing my destination, and I longed to find a way to politely free myself of Adelaide’s company.

Her long lashes narrowed around her lovely eyes. “You’re quite determined, aren’t you? You’re frightening me a little, Emma. I don’t believe I’ve ever seen this side of you before. It’s as if, by living in your aunt’s house and driving her rig, you’ve gained something of her stubbornness.”

I couldn’t help grinning. “You might just be right about that. Whoever decided to frame my brother didn’t take the spirit of Aunt Sadie into account. She never backed down from anyone or anything in her life, and neither will I.”

Chapter 8

I
might have a portion of Aunt Sadie’s spirit, but not her devil-may-care attitude when it came to polite society. She had never worried about whom she insulted or who disapproved of her “brazen ways.” But when Adelaide implored me to stay and have lunch with her, I couldn’t find it within me to say no. Especially not when she grasped my hand in both of hers, thanked me for being “such a dear,” and even apologized for not being as good a friend to me as she should have when we were younger.

I truly couldn’t resist her entreaties when her husband arrived home with his valet, hobbled past us grumbling about a missing Ming vase, made his way into the library, and slammed the door.

Poor Adelaide, fate had granted her fondest wishes, but with a cruel twist. My old friend was hurting and feeling very much alone, and no amount of riches could offer the comfort she sought. Only her husband’s restored health and judgment could do that, or, in the interim, an hour or two of my company. And so I followed her up to her second-floor sitting room with its light wicker furnishings, pretty watercolor paintings, and expansive views onto the rear gardens and the glittering ocean beyond. She talked while I mostly listened, and we nibbled on crabmeat and watercress sandwiches, strawberries with heavenly Grand Marnier sauce, and airy almond puffs.

Shadows fell across the east-facing gardens by the time I finally worked up the wherewithal to excuse myself, but I couldn’t help patting myself on the back for a deed well done. She walked me down to the front door, and there it occurred to me to ask a favor.

“Adelaide, I have another stop to make before going home. It’s close by. Would it be all right if I left Barney and the carriage here for a little while?”

“As long as you like, dear friend. Shall I accompany you?”

“No,” I said, perhaps a tad too quickly. I tried to cover by implying she surely had better things to do, but she saw through my ruse.

“More detective work?” Her lips pursed and she set a hand on my shoulder. “You won’t do anything ill-advised, will you?”

“I promise I won’t, Adelaide. Just a friendly chat with an old friend of the family.” I tried to convince myself as well as her, but secretly I wondered how Jack Parsons would react to my questions about the watch I’d discovered in Uncle Cornelius’s safe.

But first, of course, I had to figure out which house on nearby Lakeview Avenue was his, and I’d realized this might be easier done on foot. I could walk slowly, watch the houses, double back if I needed to, without attracting undo attention.

A sight that greeted me as I turned from Bellevue onto Lakeview prompted me to grasp my skirts and speed my steps. A man dressed in a plain but well-tailored black suit presently strode up a front walkway toward a large gabled, shingle-style house.

“Mr. Mason!”

He stopped and turned, his figure tall and straight, his silver hair impeccably groomed and only slightly thinning for a man of his years. “Miss Emmaline?” A frown deepened the lines scoring his forehead, and the glance he flicked toward the house’s paneled front door indicated a wish for escape.

Civility, however, dictated he wait as I approached him. “What a surprise, Mr. Mason. Are you . . .” I paused and regarded the deep hunter green trim around the windows and outlining the steep gables of the house. Only one explanation could account for the man’s presence here. “Are you working here now?”

“I am, Miss Emmaline. Mr. Parsons, with whom I believe you are well-acquainted, was good enough to offer me temporary employment for the length of his stay in town.”

“This is Mr. Parsons’s house?” Could I be so lucky? I felt an inner burst of success.

“Indeed, it is.” A look of pain entered his eyes, swiftly followed by a flicker of embarrassment. The circumstances under which he’d been dismissed from The Breakers hung in the awkward silence.

With a mental shake, I remembered why I’d come. “I’m glad, Mr. Mason. I wonder . . . did the landlady from the Harbor Hill tell you that Mrs. O’Neal and I had come to visit you?”

“Oh, I . . . I . . .” He ran a hand lightly over his neatly slicked hair. “I’m terribly sorry. I meant to send a thank-you note, but then this position came up and I hurried to accept. Mary—uh, Mrs. O’Neal’s—pot roast is unequalled.”

“Indeed, it is. Is Mr. Parsons at home?”

“Not presently, Miss Emmaline.”

“Oh. Um . . . might I come in anyway? Just for a moment.”

He surveyed me with puzzlement that bordered on suspicion, but he could hardly refuse my request—and we both knew it. “After you, miss.”

He brought me to an informal parlor at the back of the house and offered me tea. I accepted, even though I’d consumed more than ample refreshments at Redwing Cottage. Anything to prolong my stay in the hopes Mr. Parsons would soon return.

Mason returned with a pot of tea and a platter of fruit and biscuits. My stomach groaned rather than growled, but I dutifully plunked treats onto my plate and pretended to nibble. He seemed about to bow out of the room, but I gestured him to the chair on the other side of the sofa table.

“Please stay, Mr. Mason. There’s something I’d like to ask you.”

“It’s hardly proper, Miss Emmaline.”

“Nevertheless. You know my brother has been accused of murdering Alvin Goddard the night of Miss Gertrude’s coming-out ball.”

Nodding gravely, he perched somewhat stiffly on the edge of his chair. “You and Mr. Gale have my sympathies. I’m certain he’ll be exonerated.”

“Thank you.” I knew I must proceed with caution, for my next question would all but accuse Mason of the crime. Vaguely I wondered if there was anyone else in the house—someone close enough to hear me should I need assistance. . . .

“Mr. Mason, please understand that I’m only trying to get at all the facts. I’ve learned that it was Mr. Goddard who accused you of stealing from your employers.”

A muscle in his cheek bounced. “He had little on which to base that accusation, miss, other than the circumstantial evidence that I had unlimited access to the entire house, whereas other staff does not.” He drew himself up as he spoke, his chin outthrust with wounded dignity.

“Yet despite a lack of any truly damning evidence, you lost your position.”

“Unfortunately, yes. It very much surprised me that Mr. Vanderbilt didn’t show more faith in me.”

“You were happy in your position with the family, weren’t you?”

“For a good many years, miss, as well you know. I watched the children grow into adults. I presided over every important family event as well as saw to their everyday needs. It saddened me to leave them.”

“It must have angered you as well.”

After a brief hesitation, he said, “I won’t deny that it did.”

I sipped my tea, but from over the cup I scrutinized every muscle in his face. “Was your anger directed toward Mr. Goddard?”

“Why, Emma, are you accusing my new butler of murder?”

 

The voice made both Mr. Mason and me flinch. Jack Parsons stood in the doorway, a newspaper tucked beneath his arm, the grin spreading across his handsome face mocking us ever so slightly. His blond hair, disheveled by the wind, fell with roguish appeal across his brow. It never failed to surprise me that a man my father’s age could appear so hale, so full of youthful vigor. Jack Parsons was timeless, and sometimes I wondered what devil’s bargain he might have made to stay that way.

After a beat he sauntered toward us and settled into the leather chair to my right, tossing his newspaper onto the table. At the same time, Mr. Mason jumped to his feet. Mr. Parson’s grin persisted. “Sit, Mason. Go ahead and answer Miss Cross’s question.”

Mason once again settled uneasily onto the chair’s edge. His gaze veered from his new employer to practically impale me against the back of the velvet sofa. “Yes, I was angry at Mr. Goddard. One doesn’t simply walk into a head butler’s position, especially not in a household of such magnitude as the Vanderbilts’. It took years to work my way up—years of hard work, dedication, unerring loyalty. . . .” He broke off, clutching his hands together in his lap so hard they shook. A deep breath calmed him only marginally. “Because of Mr. Goddard, my future is no longer secure. Who wouldn’t be angry?”

I had no answer for him. Any normal person in his circumstances would express similar emotions. But the question remained: Was I staring into the troubled eyes of a normal person, or of a murderer?

“Your turn, Emma.” Mr. Parsons took no pains to hide his amusement. “Why don’t you ask Mason where he was on the night of the crime? Perhaps he has an alibi.”

“Mr. Mason?” I said.

“I was in my room at the Harbor Hill.”

“Can any witnesses substantiate that claim?” This again came from Jack Parsons. I almost scowled at him but kept my attention on the butler instead. However entertaining this all might be to Mr. Parsons, it was deadly serious business to me, and to Mr. Mason, judging by his grim expression and trembling fingertips.

“Unfortunately not.” He shook his head and added a shrug for good measure. “I spent the night alone. Reading.”

“What book?” I asked automatically.

Mr. Parsons chuckled his approval, no doubt of my quick thinking and clever attempt to trip the butler in his story.

But Mr. Mason gave his answer readily enough. “Dickens.
Great Expectations.
It seemed both appropriate and ironic.”

“David is a likable protagonist,” I said, watching him intently.

“The main character is called Pip,” he corrected me. “You’re thinking of
David Copperfield.

It proved nothing. I’d read Dickens in school; most people had. And as the Vanderbilts’ butler, Mason would have access to their extensive library over the years.

Still, I found myself wanting to believe him. I remembered how kind he’d always been to my cousins and me, greeting our antics with a patient smile and keeping our confidences, even lending his services as butler when the bunch of us played at being adults in the playhouse.

“Any other questions, miss?”

“No, Mr. Mason. And thank you. I hope you understand.”

He came to his feet. “I wish Mr. Gale all the best.”

But not, his tone implied, at his own expense.

Not quite able to look Mr. Parsons in the eye yet, I directed my gaze at the newspaper he’d dropped on the table. The headline emblazoned across the top of the page stole my breath:

 

STUART BRADEN GALE IV ACCUSED OF COLD-BLOODED MURDER

 

Abandoning my tea and plate of barely touched biscuits, I snatched up the paper.

Lifelong Newport resident Stuart Braden Gale IV was arrested at The Breakers early Thursday morning on charges of brutally beating Alvin Goddard, financial secretary to Cornelius Vanderbilt II, and pushing the defenseless man to his death from a balcony poised some twenty feet in the air. Though Mr. Gale denies the charges, all evidence points in his direction. . . .

With a cry of disgust I slapped the paper to my lap. I didn’t need to read the byline; I knew who wrote the sensationalist piece: Ed Billings, my fellow reporter at the
Observer,
a man possessing few scruples when it came to getting “the scoop.”

“He wasn’t anywhere near The Breakers that night. Mr. Shipley, the gatekeeper, would not have let him in,” I complained bitterly, remembering the much more accurate and tempered article I’d written. The one Mr. Millford had turned down with a proverbial pat on my head.

“Who wasn’t at The Breakers that night, Emma?”

“My nemesis, Ed Billings. It doesn’t take many powers of observation to see he got his information secondhand or even thirdhand and then exaggerated, embellished, and dramatized the facts.”

“I’d say thirdhand,” Mr. Parsons said. “No one at the ball would have deigned to speak to a reporter, unless it was one of the servants.”

“And that’s hardly likely after Mr. Mason’s dismissal. They all must be terrified for their jobs.”

“So what are you doing here, Emma?”

A lie very nearly sprang from my tongue, something about being out walking and happening upon Mr. Mason. But perhaps Aunt Sadie gave me a nudge from beyond, because I remembered her courage and my own vow to take the direct approach.

“I came to see you,” I said evenly. “Brady told me you’d leased a house on Lakeview, so I decided to try my luck in finding you. Mr. Mason happened to be outside as I rounded the corner.”

“Fortunate. What can I do for you?” Concern entered his expression. “Do you need money? For Brady’s case?”

“No, nothing like that,” I said quickly and dismissively. “Although this does have to do with Brady. Mr. Parsons—”

“Emma,” he interrupted with a flick of his hand, “you’re all grown up and I’m an old family friend. Don’t you think it’s time you started calling me Jack?”

“Oh, I . . .” His deep brown eyes held mine, and something in their dark depths flustered me and made me stumble over my reply. Suddenly his chiseled, patrician features held me immobile while the mingled scents of hair tonic and shaving soap burrowed like fine brandy inside me.

Apparently, certain elements of that old schoolgirl fascination lingered to muddle my senses. I clasped my hands, bit down on the insides of my cheeks, and refused to succumb another moment to Mr. Parson’s—Jack’s—charms.

Good heavens, a man old enough to be my father.

“All right, if you insist. Jack . . .” The sound of it on my lips sent heat to prickle my cheeks, but I plowed on. “Brady tells me you’re an investor in the New Haven-Hartford-Providence line Uncle Cornelius has been secretly planning to purchase.”

Jack’s sensual charisma drained away as his gaze flared with surprise. “So much for secrets, not with you around. Does your uncle know you’re aware of his business dealings?”

“What my uncle knows isn’t the point. It’s who else knew, and did that person set my brother up?”

“How so?”

“Jack,” I said more easily this time, “I know Brady went to you with the idea of stealing Uncle Cornelius’s plans for the line and attempting to outbuy his buyout.”

“And you think what, Emma?” His voice had hardened to that of a stranger’s. “I told Brady it was a lousy idea.”

BOOK: Murder at the Breakers
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