by M. J. Tjia
Legend Press Ltd, 51 Gower Street, London, WC1E 6HJ
[email protected] | www.legendpress.co.uk
Contents © M.J. Tjia 2019
The right of the above author to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data available.
Print ISBN 978-1-78955-048-1
Ebook ISBN 978-1-78955-047-4
Set in Times. Printing managed by Jellyfish Solutions Ltd
Cover design by Simon Levy | www.simonlevyassociates.co.uk
All characters, other than those clearly in the public domain, and place names, other than those well-established such as towns and cities, are fictitious and any resemblance is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
M.J. Tjia is a Brisbane-based writer. Her work has been longlisted for the Crime Writers Association (UK) Debut Dagger and the Margery Allingham Short Story Competition. She was awarded a Scarlet Stiletto Award (Australia) in the historical category. She is the author of She Be Damned (2017) and A Necessary Murder (2018), the first two novels in the Heloise Chancey Mystery series. The Death of Me is the third novel in the series.
Follow M. J. on Twitter
@mjtjia
For Emma
PROLOGUE
When I close my eyes, I can see the pile of men, five or six of them – who can tell how many in such a tangle of limbs – lying beneath the buckled, torn roofing. Arms stick out, some legs, and even one head, torn from its body, covered in so much dust, plaster and blood it would be difficult for his closest relatives to claim him.
That was my first strike. Outside the police station by the river.
The second strike was even better. I miscalculated how much black powder was necessary and the bomb left a small crater in the ground outside the palace gates. Fewer casualties, though. That bombing only claimed two lives. But the terror in the eyes of the survivors, their frantic scrambling to escape the area, the welts and scratches that oozed blood, it all warmed my heart. It really did. Because really, these deadly little excursions were nothing more than rehearsals for my real goal: taking down the man who stands in my way. Who stands in the way of many, really. I’m not entirely selfish.
My finger traces the chill outline of the sphere that lies on the table before me. The dark cast iron encases so much more death. My eyes take in the wooden fuse drilled into its centre, and I smile as I imagine lighting it. I hope I see the spray of bricks, rising in the air as buoyant and light as a child’s building blocks. The smoke, black and acrid, billowing into the sky, obstructing for a few moments the sight of my beautiful work. People, flung to the ground like discarded rag dolls; others crouched in supplication to my work, their arms raised in submission, their mouths open in awe. For those few moments, they will know, and I will know, that true power lies with me, not with their God.
CHAPTER ONE
Violette and I step down from the voiture de remise – a much smarter conveyance than the hansom cabs in London – and take stock. Rue de Clichy is quite narrow, and tall buildings block whatever sunlight there might be. Wind blusters down the avenue, buffeting my hat, tipping my wide skirt as though it’s a church bell. Further down the street, a solitary cherry tree, still missing its spring coverage, vies for room in a tiny square with parked phaetons and buggies. We stand in front of a patisserie and my eyes scan the golden pastries on offer, pausing on a pear croustade. Despite the midday repast Hatterleigh and I enjoyed not one hour before in the Palais Royale, I know I’d enjoy its sticky syrup on my lips.
“I think it is over there, Madame,” Violette says, pointing across the road.
Violette is my handmaid while I’m in Paris with Hatterleigh, a French girl I’ve borrowed from a friend. Amah didn’t want to join me this time, said she had things of her own to do in England. I think, though, she’s sulking, because I’ve postponed our trip to Venice. I promised to take her when the weather is more clement, but I recognised that twist to her mouth. She doesn’t believe me.
I follow Violette towards a building that takes up nearly half the block. A generous number of French doors and tiny balconies line each level, shutters open revealing blank windowpanes. We walk past a shopfront on the corner that advertises a Grande Pharmacie Commerciale, beneath another sign, Dentiste, on the floor above. Pausing outside a pair of doors painted in a rich, maroon lacquer, Violette gestures to a discreet sign above the doorway, written in gold lettering. “Debtor’s Prison, Clichy,” she announces.
Taking the letter from my bag, I re-read Somerscale’s instructions. It definitely says to meet him here. At the Debtor’s Prison. But how a man worth twenty thousand pounds a year could find himself in such a place is beyond my ken. I bang on the door’s brass knocker and it’s not many moments before a rather short fellow, with grey hair and a grubby vest, answers the door.
Speaking swiftly in her native tongue, Violette tells the man why we are here. He grunts and turns, waves his hand for us to follow him along the dim corridor. Two men, guards presumably, in navy blue uniforms, lounge on pine chairs and we pass them to climb a set of dusty stairs until we reach the first landing. A vast space yawns wide before us, impressive columns punctuating the long gallery every few metres. But the area is uncarpeted, the fireplaces bare. Grey light flows into the room past the tattered curtains, lighting upon a number of men, twenty men perhaps, huddled in groups on the worn floorboards. One man stands by the French doors, reading aloud from a newspaper and, as we pass through, he stops for a moment and stares, as do the rest of them, craning around to see us.
“Tailors,” mutters the caretaker. “Paying back what they owe.”
A large pair of scissors and a flat iron lie on the floor in the middle of the nearest cluster of tailors, who bow their heads again to carry on with mending the squares of cloth in their laps. Some of them wear hats, as if they are just passing through, or are in polite company, and hanging from a nail wedged into one of the columns is a natty overcoat and top hat. A poster is pinned to the wall, but my French is rusty, I can only make out the words ‘work’ and ‘scoundrel’.
“No women?” I ask, thinking of the harried seamstresses I have known, who failed to keep up with demand, who found themselves in another trade all together.
“They are on the top level,” the caretaker says, nodding towards the ceiling as we climb another set of stairs. “They are lucky. They have more light. And when the sun is out, they have more warmth too.”
Finally, on the third floor, he leads us down a narrow corridor and unlocks a door to our left. He ushers us in, locking the door behind us.
“Heloise, how wonderful to see your lovely countenance,” says Sir Simon Somerscale, rising from a window seat. He approaches us, taking my hands in his cold ones. He’s a thin man, maybe a good ten years older than I am. He has a pleasant face, and I know a number of beauties who are quite jealous of his fine cheekbones. “And this is…?” he asks, noticing my maid.
“This is Violette. I know your message asked me to come alone, but she fulfils the role of chaperone today,” I reply, pointing out a kitchen chair for her to sit on by the door. Unpinning my hat from my hair, I admire its purple felt and coloured ribbons before placing it on the table. “My French is not what it was, although I can still parlez vous with jewellers and dressmakers all I need. You may rest
assured, she only has very limited English. She will not know of what we speak.” I place my hands on my waist and gaze around the room. It’s a neat space, with clean, serviceable carpets and oak furniture. The curtains are of a sturdy white linen, and the sofa upholstery, a pond green colour, is inexpensive yet unsullied. “It’s not every day I’m summoned to visit someone in prison.” Which is not entirely true. Many a friend have I visited at the debtors’ gaol in Whitecross Street. Glancing back at Somerscale, I grin.
He bids me to take a seat at the table. “Ah, but you must understand, this is one of the better lodgings available here. Surely you passed the other unfortunates who may never find their way out of here again.” He takes up a crystal decanter, and the dim light from the window glints against the edges of the cut glass. He pours us each a measure of wine, and says, “My man, Victor, brought me what luxuries he thought I might need. But how sad he was – almost in tears, I assure you – when he was not permitted to stay here with me. He does love to obey my every whim.”
“This fine establishment won’t allow you to keep staff?” I ask. “How will you get along?”
His lips lift into a smile, but his brows crease into a mock frown. “Madam, you have forgotten that I have seen military service. I am quite capable of looking after myself.”
I laugh. “Somerscale, I’d wager these beads of mine,” I grasp the pearls that circle my wrist, “that you had as many staff to do your bidding at the port of Balaclava as you would in your Arlington Street mansion.”
His eyes widen for a moment as he stares into space. “Heloise, you scamp, I believe you are correct.”
I sip my wine, and gaze at him over the glass’s rim. “How did you find yourself in this hole, Somerscale?” I’m at a loss to know why he, an English gentleman, is to be found here, in a debtor’s prison in Paris, and for what reason he requested my company. Over lunch, while Hatterleigh told me of the powerful stallion he’d purchased at Longchamp and Lady Paige’s indiscretion with her Hindustanee servant, I puzzled over Somerscale’s missive. What sort of debt would imprison such a wealthy man? Has he lost his fortune to cards, like many greenhorns I have known? It seems very unlikely. Has he invested poorly in some dubious rail company? There have not been any stock exchange busts lately that I know of. Or… I take in Somerscale’s even features, blond hair, lips so finely chiselled I have even caught myself wondering what they’d be like to kiss, despite feeling a total lack of attraction for the man. I slap my glass down onto the tabletop. “Somerscale, do not tell me that a fair beauty has fleeced you?”
He leans back in his chair and sighs. “You are almost correct, Heloise, almost. Let’s just say I am here over an affair of the heart.”
“You must be funning, sir!”
“Not at all. I made the mistake of loving a young lady who served me in Chateau d’Argent. You have eaten at this restaurant, Heloise? Best escargot in France. Unfortunately, my pretty butterfly has parents who feel I owe her more than she is worth.”
“Trifled with her feelings, did you?”
“Not at all,” he says, indignant, yet with a rueful smile. “We had a delightful time together. Absolutely worth the fifty pounds I agreed to give her.”
“A hopeful lorette, was she? Or should I say ‘disappointed’?” I couldn’t blame the young woman for trying to land such a catch.
“More grisette, Heloise.”
“Oh dear.” I throw the rest of the wine back and gaze at him, my eyebrow cocked in what I hope is a cynical manner. The truth is that I find this French system of ranking the types of women who use their charms to make money quite irksome. I’m thankful – bloody relieved, in fact – to find myself in the top tier, but I’m uncomfortably aware that, like in any social order, there are those scrounging at the bottom, fighting for more, desperate for a better life.
“Her parents demand I marry her, would you believe?” he says, pouring more wine into my glass. “But I ask you, Heloise, what would my wife say to that? Talk about committing a crime.”
“So, how did all of this mess land you here?”
He shrugs. “Her family mean to take me to court for breach of promise. They have demanded five hundred pounds from me. I offered them a hundred, which was double my original proposal, after all.”
“But this is ridiculous. You can afford to pay them a paltry five hundred pounds, Somerscale.”
“Heloise, it’s the principle of the thing. I will not be swindled by a family of French buffoons.”
I laugh, shake my head. “Oh, Somerscale, just pay the poor girl.” I scan the room. “And surely you’re bored with being cooped up here?”
He nods. “I am indeed. I’ve been here almost four days, and I’m not sure I can spend another night on the lumpy mattress they have afforded me.” His face becomes serious as he stares into the bottom of his glass. “But I believe it might be best if I stay here a little longer.”
“Why?”
Somerscale leaves the table to fetch his cigarette case from the mantelpiece. “Take one,” he says, offering me a Russian cigarette. I feel his eyes study me as he lights it. “Tell me, how did you get away from your Hatterleigh?”
“Told him I had a fitting for a new gown.”
“Good woman,” he says. “There is a reason I desired you to come alone. I have something, something rather delicate, I’d like to ask of you.”
My backbone stiffens a little. Please don’t let this man make advances upon me. I have never really felt any frisson of attraction for Somerscale, and I certainly would not want to begin an affair in such a place. I turn my head imperceptibly, catch a glimpse of Violette out of the corner of my eye. She’s nibbling on her thumb nail, staring at the tips of her shoes.
Somerscale draws deeply on his cigarette, and lets the smoke out from his lungs in a long sigh. “And I’m almost positive that your Hatterleigh would not give his assent, if he was to find out.”
“Well, luckily I do not need his approval in all that I do,” I say, annoyed, discarding the opportunity to use Hatterleigh as an excuse to extricate myself from an awkward situation.
Somerscale smiles at me, lazily, and says again, “Good woman. You are what the French call recherchée.” Straightening in his chair, he leans on the table towards me, business-like. “I am supposed to meet a man tonight. At a certain taproom in Bocages des Anges. Do you know the area?”
“Of course I’ve heard of it. It’s notorious. Never had the pleasure of experiencing its charms, though.”
He nods slowly. “That’s the problem. I’m very reluctant…” He broods for a moment, watching the runnel of smoke lift from the tip of his cigarette.
“What?”
Shaking his head abruptly, he says, “I’m a fool, Heloise. Now that I really think about it, I should never have involved you. I might have endangered you already.” He pushes his seat back and strides across to one of the French doors. He lifts the curtain away a fraction, peers down onto the street.
“What are you talking about, Somerscale?” I say, following. I go to look out the glass too, but he holds a hand out to stop me. I halt, “Well, now you have to tell me. I positively won’t leave until you have told me of what plans you had in your head for me.” I take one last toke – I’m not overly fond of Russian cigarettes – and toss the end into the grate of the fireplace.
Somerscale folds his arms. “I’m supposed to meet a man tonight, on very important business. In a sordid little place in the Rue de l’me Damnée. But obviously,” he looks around the room, “I can’t make it.”
“And you thought I might go in your stead?” I ask, amused. “What made you think of me?”
“Lord Conroy, my cousin you know, told me last year of how he commissioned you to, shall we say, ‘rescue’ his niece. He spoke very highly of your discretion, which is why I thought of you in this matter, knowing you were here, too, in Paris. I need someone to meet this man for me. Tonight.”
“It’s that important?”
“
Imperative.” The word has the deep thrum of a drum’s note.
I feel a tickle of excitement. A little adventure. I could do with the distraction, for there is only so much spending and carousing a woman can do before it begins to pall. “Somerscale, I’m curious. Why ask me, when you have any number of male friends – gentlemen, servants, rogues even – who could take up this matter? And why can you not just arrange for him to meet you here?”
Somerscale runs his fingers through his blond locks and drops down onto the sofa. “I can’t tell you much, Heloise. If you take on this task, I will divulge just as much as is necessary. I can say this though, the meeting involves a mission I have embarked upon on behalf of certain people at Westminster.” His voice lowers on the last word, and he glances nervously at Violette. I look around at her too, but this time she’s sucking the end of her plait, and has her eyes raised to the ceiling as she hums something to herself.
“Westminster?” Something political? Covert? My stomach constricts with the thrill of it as I take a seat next to him.
Somerscale nods. “Westminster has intercepted a letter regarding a planned crime. They’re trying to identify the fellow who sent the message and the rogue he’s organised to meet. They’re supposed to meet up tonight.”
“Do you know why?”
He lights himself another cigarette. “All I know is that they’re to exchange some crucial information which I am to divert, disguised as this fellow’s contact. It may well save lives.”
“But how is this man to know you are the one he is to meet?”
“A special code is mentioned in the letter we intercepted, which I’ll tell you of, should you take on this little assignment.”
“Is he dangerous?”
Somerscale’s eyes are anxious as they find mine. He shrugs. “I am not sure, Heloise. And for all I know, it might even be a woman. God knows, women have made very useful spies in the past. All I know is that the person holds information about a terrible conspiracy to commit…”