The Duke Who Knew Too Much

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by Grace Callaway


  What would happen if he lost control?

  A rapping on the door jerked Emma back to the present. Her breath was puffing from her lips, her skin misted with perspiration. As she sat up, her breasts brushed against her nightclothes, the tips oddly sensitive and tingling.

  “Emma, are you awake?” Her sister Dorothea’s gentle voice drifted through the door.

  “I—I’ll be right there,” she said.

  She took a moment to compose herself; she had no wish to worry her sisters. When she went to unlock the door, Thea, Violet, Polly, and Primrose filed in like a troop of cheerful ghosts in their voluminous lawn night rails.

  “Aren’t you supposed to be in bed?” Emma said to the two youngest.

  While Polly looked abashed, Rosie’s emerald eyes sparkled with mischief.

  “Yes,” the latter said merrily. “So hurry and close the door before Mama catches us!”

  With her flaxen hair and flawless face and form, Rosie Kent was a stunning miniature of Marianne. At sixteen, the spirited girl was already beginning to turn heads, and Ambrose joked that he dreaded the day of Rosie’s coming out for surely he’d have to start carrying a shotgun to fend off her suitors.

  As Emma closed the door, her middle sister Violet declared, “Last one to the bed is the rotten egg!” and, amidst muffled squeals and giggles, the four girls made a mad dash for the destination.

  Relieved for the return to normalcy, Emma dragged a chair to the side of the bed. She sat and found herself under the scrutiny of four pairs of bright, inquisitive eyes. Her sisters had arranged themselves along the length of bed, with Violet at the foot, Polly and Rosie in the middle, and Thea at the head.

  As usual, Violet spoke first. She sat cross-legged, her chestnut hair tumbling down her back. Agile and energetic, she gave the impression of constant motion.

  “Start at the beginning, Em,” she said, “and don’t leave anything out.”

  “The beginning of what?”

  Vi rolled her caramel-colored eyes. “Your visit to the magistrates’ office today, of course.”

  For the time being, Ambrose and Emma had both agreed to keep mum on the subject of Lady Osgood’s murder. They’d thought it best to protect their younger siblings from the gruesome details for as long as possible. Protecting a Kent from her own curiosity was never an easy task, however.

  “How did you find out?” Emma said with a sigh.

  “We didn’t mean to snoop.” Thea’s hazel eyes were soft with apology. She rested against the headboard, her hands gracefully stroking Tabitha who lay belly-up and purring in her lap. “We found out by accident.”

  A year younger than Emma, Dorothea was the gentlest of the Kents. Emma attributed it to Thea’s constitution, which had been frail since childhood. Although her health had grown more robust, Thea continued to favor more sedate pursuits, and Emma thought proudly that her sister’s performance at the pianoforte could compare with that of any fine London lady.

  “Thea found out by accident. I snooped,” Vi said with aplomb. “I asked Millie the chambermaid to ask John the groom where you and Ambrose had gone all day. Since John has eyes for Millie, he told her straightaway. Thea overheard me telling Polly and Primrose about it.”

  “You’re not supposed to encourage gossip amongst the servants, Violet,” Emma chided.

  “Pish posh. Stop trying to change the subject,” her incorrigible sister replied.

  “Yes, do tell.” Rosie’s smile could charm a bird from a tree, and her tone was just short of wheedling. “You wouldn’t want us to perish from curiosity, would you?”

  “You should tell us, Emma, for your sake if not ours,” Polly put in.

  Emma’s youngest sister sat with her arms hugging her knees. The womanhood which had begun to blossom so radiantly in Rosie hadn’t yet unfurled in Polly. At sixteen, she was still a small, thin girl with wavy hair that was neither blond nor brown but a range of shades in between. To Emma, her baby sister possessed a unique beauty: Polly’s solemn features exuded quiet dignity, a blend of wisdom and innocence in her aquamarine eyes.

  At times, those remarkable eyes seemed to see too deeply. Back in Chudleigh Crest, there’d been whispers about Polly being “odd,” which had made the sensitive girl retreat into shyness. As a result, Emma and the rest of the siblings were particularly protective of her.

  Family always stood together.

  “Why for my sake, dear?” she asked.

  “Because something’s bothering you,” Polly said with her quiet perceptiveness. “You’ve always said that we could come to you with anything. So you should feel free to talk to us in return.”

  “You haven’t been yourself, Em. Even I can see that,” Vi added.

  “We just want to help,” Rosie chimed in.

  “But only if you wish us to,” Thea said.

  “For heaven’s sake, you win.” Amused and touched at the same time, Emma shook her head. “What was I thinking? Trying to refuse a band of Kents?”

  “And Harry’s not even here.” The gruff wistfulness in Violet’s voice gave away how much she missed their brother, her favorite sibling rival. “He would have added a barrage of logic to the mix.”

  “What happened, Emma?” Rosie prompted.

  Emma debated what to tell them. She wouldn’t lie—that wasn’t the Kent way—but she didn’t want to spoil the girls’ innocence, either. In the end, she compromised, acknowledging that she had witnessed an altercation between Strathaven and Lady Osgood and carefully omitting the explicit details of what she’d seen.

  “What a blackguard!” Vi exclaimed nonetheless. “I’m glad you walloped him with your reticule. If I’d been there, I would have planted a facer to finish him off!” Her fist swung to mimic the motion.

  “Why hasn’t Mr. McLeod mentioned having a duke for a brother?” Thea asked, her brow pleating.

  “I don’t think Mr. McLeod and Strathaven are close.” Considering the animosity Emma had witnessed between the two, that might be the understatement of the year. What had driven a wedge between the brothers? she wondered. “According to Ambrose, Mr. McLeod wants to find success on his own merits and doesn’t want it bandied about that he’s heir presumptive to a duke.”

  “And Strathaven’s not just any duke, he’s the Devil Duke.” This came from Rosie, the resident Society expert. “According to the gossip rags, he’s as wicked as they come. As I recall from Debrett’s, he wasn’t even the next in line for the duchy—he only got the title after two distant relatives ahead of him in the succession mysteriously died.”

  “Gadzooks,” Violet breathed.

  “There’s more.” Rosie’s voice lowered to a dramatic timbre. “There were whispers of cruelty during his first marriage. To this day, some say the duchess was fleeing from him when the ship she was on went under.”

  Gasps went up in the room.

  Emma’s nape tingled. “Why is a man like that still welcomed in Society?”

  “He’s more than welcomed—the ton panders to him,” Rosie said. “People might say things behind his back, but they don’t dare give him the cut direct. He’s too rich and powerful. Now he’s looking to secure his dynasty with an heir, and according to the on dit, his requirements for a wife are rather peculiar.”

  Emma frowned. “In what way?”

  “He’s made it clear he expects complete obedience from his wife. An heir and no trouble. Some say that the marriage contract spells out specific consequences,”—Rosie’s green eyes were very wide—“for any violation of his rules.”

  “Consequences?” Violet said in puzzled tones. “Does he plan to send her to bed without supper? Take away her riding privileges?”

  “I have no idea. They don’t tell the really good details to girls,” Rosie said with a sigh.

  Emma scowled. “And what about him? Is he proposing to be a model of husbandly propriety in return?”

  “The Devil Duke?” Rosie rolled her eyes. “I think not. He’s notorious for his paramours.”

>   Emma shook her head. “Why would any woman in her right mind accept such terms?”

  To her, marriage ought to be a meeting of equals. A coming together of minds and hearts. She’d seen the strength of the bond between her parents and between Ambrose and Marianne. Although she’d never known such a connection with a man, she’d settle for no less if she ever married.

  “Um, jewels? Untold wealth and privilege?” Rosie’s moon-bright tresses rippled over her shoulders as she shrugged. “Prior to the Osgood scandal, ladies were lining up in droves.”

  “At least the duke is frank about his expectations.” Thea, bless her heart, always thought the best of everyone. “One cannot fault a man for being honest.”

  “Only for being a murderer,” Vi said with a snort.

  “If the duke is a dangerous man and you’ve crossed him,” Polly said anxiously, “do you have anything to worry about, Emma?”

  Emma gave her youngest sister a reassuring smile. “There’s no need to fret, dearest. I’ve already given my testimony, and the matter is in the hands of the magistrates now. In all likelihood, Strathaven and I will never cross paths again.”

  Quelling a sudden shiver, she prayed she was right.

  Chapter Six

  “We’ve been through this before,” Alaric said coldly.

  On the other side of his desk, the pair of magistrates shifted in their seats.

  “Yes, your grace.” The one on the right was named Dixon, and he was plump and prone to sweat. He patted a handkerchief against his shiny pate. “In light of new information, however, we’d like to ask you a few more questions, if we may.”

  New information—supplied by Emma Kent, no doubt.

  A muscle ticked in Alaric’s jaw. The blasted chit had wasted no time in making good on her threat. Thanks to her testimony, the magistrates’ office was now interrogating him instead of investigating Silas Webb or other possible suspects. Before the authorities had merely been incompetent; now they were actively wasting his time.

  Alaric’s temples throbbed, anger and frustration battering at his self-control. It didn’t help matters that he’d slept poorly for the past three nights. Images of Clara, unmoving upon the carpet, made him toss and turn. That he could understand; he wouldn’t rest until he saw justice done for her.

  What he couldn’t comprehend was Emma Kent showing up in his dreams as well. He’d woken up sweating, his fists clenching the bedclothes. His heart pounded with fury while his erect cock tented the sheets. In the crazed twilight, he hadn’t known what he yearned for more: to wring her neck or fuck her senseless.

  What the devil is the matter with me? Why do I lust for a chit who’s done nothing but wreak havoc in my life?

  His obsession with her was madness itself.

  “Get on with it,” he clipped out.

  “Thank you, your grace.” Dobbs, the other magistrate, was tall and thin, his papery-looking skin stretched tight over his bony features. He held a notebook and pencil in hand. “How would you describe your relationship with Lady Osgood?”

  “Be more specific.”

  “Would you say you were on good terms with the victim?” Dobbs rephrased.

  For Christ’s sake. I’d just fucked her. Is that good enough terms for you? “Yes.”

  “No trouble of any kind between you?”

  “No.”

  “You didn’t have an altercation with Lady Osgood at,”—Dobbs consulted his notebook, “Lady Buckley’s ball earlier that evening?”

  Goddamn Emma Kent. This is all her fault.

  Alaric’s fists clenched under the desk. “I did not. I will consider any rumors to the contrary slanderous—and take legal action against all who repeat such libel.”

  “Understood, your grace.” Clearing his throat, Dixon said, “And there were no witnesses during the time you and Lady Osgood were, ahem, together at the cottage? No servants who might have noticed anything?”

  “As I’ve said before, the purpose of the cottage is privacy. The staff leaves at dusk and does not return until noon.”

  “Beg pardon, your grace. We were just confirming that there were no witnesses to the victim’s poisoning—or, ahem, yours,” Dobbs said.

  Incensed by the speculative glances exchanged between the pair, Alaric said cuttingly, “You do not need witnesses. You have my word as a peer of the realm. Now have you made any progress on the missing maid or Silas Webb?”

  “No, your grace.” Dixon wiped his brow. “That is, we’ve nothing new to report on Miss Hutchins. We have, however, searched Mr. Webb’s office.”

  “And?”

  “It appears he has vacated the premises—and rather hastily, I might add. He didn’t take much with him, and, according to the landlord, he left no forwarding address.”

  “We’ll keep looking for him, of course,” Dobbs mumbled.

  Capital. Now I can sleep at night. Disgusted, Alaric stood to signal the end of the interview.

  The pair of blundering idiots scrambled to their feet.

  “Thank you for your time, your grace—” Dixon began.

  “Then do not continue to waste it,” he snapped.

  After the magistrates’ departure, Alaric stood, hands shoved in his pockets, staring out the window at the immaculate green square surrounded by townhouses. Typically the sight calmed him, reminded him of how far he’d come. Once he’d only dreamed of such privilege; now, through a combination of fate and hard work, he had an ancient title, estates in England and Scotland, and the power and wealth to do anything he wanted.

  So why did peace still elude him?

  Why was he always under siege? Why did everyone—his family, Laura, the ton, even these magisterial lack wits—try to bring him down? What was so loathsome about him that he invited continual attack?

  Bitterly, he wondered if contentment was destined to remain beyond his reach. Perhaps happiness was a mirage, the way Strathmore Castle had appeared like a refuge ... and Laura had seemed like love. As he looked out into the empty green expanse, a pair of well-dressed children—a dark-haired boy and girl—entered his field of vision. They skipped ahead of their nanny, laughing as they ran past the gate into the park. A pair of happy, pink-cheeked imps.

  Something in his chest throbbed. An old bruise that never healed.

  Or a foolish longing that wouldn’t die.

  Cursing, he scrubbed a hand over his face. Pull it together, man. Being targeted for murder was no excuse to turn into a maudlin fool. The world be damned: he would take matters into his own hands as he’d always done. If he’d learned anything, it was that the only one he could rely upon was himself.

  Take control and take action: that was his motto.

  He’d already retained Runners to hunt for Silas Webb and the missing maid. He’d hired on extra footmen for personal security. At this point, there was naught to do but carry on; he wasn’t going to let the threat of murder interfere with his routine.

  He was considering a stop at Gentleman Jackson’s or the newer Apollo’s Academy for a round of boxing when a carriage led by matched grays stopped in front of his steps. The man who descended was tall and fit, dressed with puritanical severity in a dark jacket, trousers, and an unadorned waistcoat. The only note of color was the tawny hair curling beneath the brim of his plain hat.

  Minutes later, Alaric received his visitor in the study.

  He’d met Gabriel Ridgley, the Marquess of Tremont, at Oxford, and the two had become fast friends. Back then, Tremont had been the spare to the title, and he’d left midway through his studies to live with some wealthy relative abroad. He and Alaric had lost touch; not until last year had they come into contact again. Alaric had been surprised by how somber his once mischievous friend had become.

  Now Tremont didn’t game or drink to excess and dedicated himself to the restoration of his estates. Although his wife had died some time ago, there were no rumors of him taking a lover or mistress; he was either a monk—which Alaric doubted—or perfectly discreet. Owing to hi
s exemplary behavior, the ton had dubbed Tremont the Angel Marquess.

  Time hadn’t eroded all of Alaric and Tremont’s commonalities, however. They discovered an avid shared interest in business. Unlike other peers who didn’t deign to dirty their hands in business matters, the two spent many a night at their club discussing the merits of various financial schemes. When it came to money, they had a similar philosophy: the more the better.

  After exchanging greetings, the men settled into the wingchairs by the fire.

  “How are you, Strathaven?” Tremont said.

  “I’m fine,” Alaric said curtly. “Why shouldn’t I be?”

  “Because of the scandal.” Tremont leveled a grey gaze at him. “The gossips are saying someone stepped forward with proof that you were involved in Lady Osgood’s death.”

  Bloody Emma Kent. I’m going to wring her neck.

  “The testimony is utter claptrap.”

  “I don’t doubt it.” Tremont steepled his hands. “Unfortunately, it’s having an impact on our venture.”

  Hell’s teeth. The news pierced Alaric’s gut like an arrow. Tremont had been one of the first investors he’d tapped to join the United Mining venture, and their partnership had proved fruitful. In just over a month, they would hold a General Meeting to finalize an expansion plan that would include the purchase of several key mines in Scotland. When the vote went through, Alaric was certain stock prices would hit the roof.

  Everything had been going according to plan … until now.

  “How bad is it?” he said grimly.

  “We’ve lost a half-dozen investors, Surrey and Burrowes amongst them.”

  “Damnation.” Alaric’s hands clenched the arms of the chair at the mention of two of their scheme’s largest investors.

  “That might only be the start. Noblemen catch a whiff of scandal, and they bolt like it’s a fire. No one wants to be caught in a burning house.” Tremont paused before saying bluntly, “You should know that the current business has also resurrected talk about your previous marriage.”

 

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