“I’m certain that a person capable of breaking into an Apollo Patented Safe will have no great difficulty with a simple door lock. I will stand in front of you while you do your work. My skirts will conceal your actions.”
“And if someone does question our presence inside the house?” he asked.
“We will tell them that we are friends of Mr. Thurlow and had cause to be concerned about his health.”
“Huh.” He contemplated that for a few seconds. “Not bad. Not bad at all.”
“We entered to assure ourselves that he was not ill,” she continued blithely. “Who would contradict us?”
“Thurlow, himself, perhaps, if he happens to walk in on us while we are searching the premises?”
“He is hardly likely to summon a constable once we inform him that we are aware he is involved in an extortion scheme.”
Anthony’s teeth gleamed in a wolfish smile. “Mrs. Bryce, you and I do tend to think alike when it comes to certain matters.”
“Indeed, sir.” She smiled, aware of a keen sense of anticipation. “Now, if you would be so good as to go about your business?”
“This shouldn’t take long.” He put his hand on the knob and twisted experimentally. The door opened easily. “Not long at all.”
Louisa frowned. “Mr. Thurlow must have neglected to lock the door when he left.”
Anthony pushed the door open wider, revealing an empty hall. Louisa did not like the heavy silence that emanated from the interior of Thurlow’s lodgings. She felt the hair stir on the nape of her neck.
Anthony glided into the shadowed opening. There was a predatory alertness about him that sent another little chill across her nerves. He, too, sensed that something was very wrong.
She followed him inside, raised her veil, and looked around.
Thurlow’s lodgings were typical of those belonging to a man of modest means. She looked into the parlor, which was quite small and sparsely furnished. A hall led to the kitchen and a rear door that likely opened onto an alley. A narrow staircase ascended upward into deep shadow.
Anthony closed the door. “Is there anyone home?” he called in a voice that was pitched to carry to the upper floor. The reverberating silence seemed almost suffocating.
Louisa ran a fingertip along the top of the hall table. Her glove came away slightly smudged.
“He employs a housekeeper, but from the looks of things I would say that she does not come around every day.”
“Which may explain why she is not here today,” Anthony said.
He went into the parlor and opened the drawers in the desk. Removing a sheaf of papers he rifled through them quickly.
“Anything of interest?” she asked.
“Bills from his tailor and other tradesmen to whom he owed money.” Anthony put the stack of papers back into the drawer and picked up a small notebook. He flipped through the pages. “Miss Fawcett was right. Thurlow is, indeed, an inveterate gambler.”
“What have you got there?” She tried to peer over his shoulder.
“A record of people to whom he owes money.” Anthony turned a few more pages. “Evidently he routinely gets into debt and then somehow manages to pay off his creditors.”
“He must win occasionally, in that case.”
“This record goes back nearly three years. A few of the debts are quite large. Several thousand pounds in some instances.”
Anthony returned the notebook to the desk drawer.
She trailed after him through the remaining rooms on the ground floor. Nothing appeared out of place. It was as if Thurlow had walked out the door only moments before they arrived.
When they returned to the front hall, Anthony started up the stairs. Louisa hurried after him. The oppressive sensation seemed to grow heavier.
At the top, Anthony halted, looking down the short hall to a closed door. Louisa stopped, too, unaccountably chilled.
“What is it?” she asked.
“Wait here,” he said quietly. “He may be asleep in bed. Gamblers keep late hours.”
She ignored the order, but she was careful to keep a respectful distance behind him. The last thing she wanted to do was walk into the room of a sleeping man.
Anthony seemed unaware of her presence. Everything about him was concentrated on the closed door at the end of the hall. He knocked once. When there was no response, he turned the knob. The door opened with a long, mourning sigh of the hinges. He stood in the opening, looking into the heavily draped and shadowed room. He did not move.
Dread tightened Louisa’s nerves. She did not want to go any closer, but she forced herself to move to the doorway. The unmistakable miasma of blood and death flowed from the room.
“You do not want to come any farther,” Anthony warned in a flat, cold voice.
She took a handkerchief out of her muff and held it to her nose. Then she looked past him into the room.
A man lay face up on the bed, blankets and sheets tumbled around his waist. There was something terribly wrong with his head. The white linen pillow case was saturated with blood.
A hellish vision seemed to shimmer in the air in front of her. Lord Gavin had looked just like this when he lay dead on the floor of her bedroom.
“Louisa?” Anthony’s voice was sharp and brutal. “Are you going to faint?”
“No.” She pulled herself together with an effort. “I won’t faint.”
The dead man’s arm was crooked at the elbow, she noticed, the hand not far from his head. The lifeless fingers were wrapped around the handle of a revolver.
“Dear God,” she whispered. “He took his own life.”
Anthony walked across the room to stand looking down at the body.
“Now this is interesting,” he said.
Louisa was shocked by the stunning absence of emotion in his voice. Anthony sounded as if he were making an observation on the weather. But his face, she saw, had gone very hard, his eyes stone cold.
“What do you mean?” she managed.
“I wonder what the odds are of two of Hastings’s employees committing suicide within the span of a little more than two weeks,” he said.
19
He watched Louisa avert her eyes from the gory scene. “Are you certain you’re not going to faint?”
“I told you, I will be fine.”
“Go back downstairs,” he said quietly. “There is no need for you to remain in this room.”
She did not respond to that suggestion. “He certainly fits the descriptions the young ladies gave in their journals. He was, indeed, an exceedingly handsome man. And he appears to have been in his late twenties.”
Anthony turned back to examine the scene more closely. The bullet had inflicted considerable damage to Thurlow’s head, saturating his blond hair with blood, but his face was still mostly unmarred. He had, indeed, possessed the sort of features that drew the eyes of women.
He turned back to Louisa. Her attention was fixed on a piece of paper on top of a waist-high chest of drawers.
“Did Mr. Grantley leave a note?” she asked softly.
“Yes, according to Fowler.”
He crossed to the desk, picked up the paper and read the suicide note aloud.
“‘I cannot endure the shame that awaits. My apologies to my family.’”
“What shame?” Louisa looked at him. “Do you suppose he meant his gambling debts?”
“He does not appear to have been overly concerned about them in the past. Why would he suddenly feel the need to kill himself now?”
She nodded. “That is a very good question.”
“This is no suicide,” Anthony said, looking around the room.
“I’m inclined to agree.”
“I wonder if Hastings got rid of both of his employees for some reason,” Anthony said.
“Perhaps he thought he had cause to fear them. Maybe he believed that they were plotting against him. That would certainly explain why he hired those two guards.”
“Yes.”
She looked at him with stark, somber eyes. “What shall we do now?”