Chapter 60
Sunday, 27 September
B
rilliant and breathtakingly beautiful, the sapphire blue diamond lay nestled in a velvet-lined box on Sir Henry Lovejoy’s desk.
Sir Henry frowned down at it a moment, then raised his gaze to Sebastian. “You’re certain you wouldn’t rather return the gem to Mr. Hope yourself?”
“I think not.”
Sir Henry cleared his throat. “And this girl you were telling me about, the one who took the diamond from Eisler’s house—what was her name again?”
Sebastian kept his features carefully composed. “Jenny.”
“Just—Jenny?”
“I’m afraid so.”
“I see. And she slipped away into the night before you could secure her so that she might face charges for the theft?”
“Just so.”
Sir Henry went to stand at the window overlooking the morning bustle of Bow Street. “So you’re saying Major Wilkinson shot Eisler, but Bertram Leigh-Jones killed Jacques Collot because the French-
man found out Leigh-Jones was working for Napoléon?”
“Yes.”
“And Leigh-Jones killed Jud Foy for essentially the same reason—so that his surreptitious interest in the diamond’s whereabouts would remain unknown?”
“That, and so that he could plant the evidence on Foy’s body to make it look as if the rifleman had killed Eisler.”
“But Leigh-Jones already had a strong case against Yates.”
Sebastian shrugged. “Given that Leigh-Jones had figured out that Yates wasn’t the killer, he probably worried that the case against Yates might crumble. And the last thing Leigh-Jones wanted was renewed public interest in the murder.” Sebastian also had a sneaking suspicion Leigh-Jones was under pressure from Jarvis to release Yates, but he kept that possibility to himself.
“Yes, it all makes sense,” said Sir Henry after a moment. “But without the girl’s testimony, your explanation of the events that likely transpired the night of Eisler’s murder—while certainly plausible—must of necessity remain unproven. I therefore see no purpose in reopening an investigation that has already been officially closed.” He paused to look around, one eyebrow raised. “Unless, of course, you know where the girl might be found.”
Sebastian shook his head. “Sorry. No.”
That, at least, was the truth. He saw no reason to add that his ignorance was deliberate, or that Hero knew exactly where Jenny Davie had found refuge.
“Unfortunate.” Sir Henry ran the thumb and forefinger of one hand up and down his watch chain while he chewed his inner lip. “I’ve been contacted by the Palace. It seems the Prince’s advisers have decided that the populace would be better off without the knowledge that a prominent London magistrate was actually working for the Emperor Napoléon. The people will therefore be told that Leigh-Jones was killed in the process of apprehending a dangerous French agent.”
“How is the dangerous French agent doing, by the way?”
“He’s still alive, but I’m told he won’t be for much longer. He’s never regained consciousness.” Sir Henry hesitated, then added, “Leigh-Jones is to be given a hero’s funeral. There’s even talk of the Prince himself attending.”
“How . . . ironic.”
“It is, yes. But necessary.”
“I wonder how long he’d been working for the French.”
“If his bank account is anything to go by, I’d say quite some time. Makes you wonder, doesn’t it, how many others like him are out there? People who are both known and respected, yet whose allegiance is elsewhere.”
“I suppose we’ll never know,” said Sebastian, limping slightly as he turned toward the door.
“Lord Devlin—”
Sebastian paused to look back at him.
“I’m sorry about your friend.”
Sebastian nodded. But he did not trust himself to speak.
Leaving Bow Street, Sebastian drove to the southwestern corner of Hyde Park. Once there, he left the horses in Tom’s care and cut across the rough grass to the canal near which Rhys Wilkinson’s body had been found.
The rain had been heavy during the night, leaving the long grass wet and sodden, and battering the last of the frost-tinged leaves clinging to the surrounding trees. There was a loneliness here that sank deep into a man, a yawning melancholy that seemed a part of the white empty sky and the tracery of branches and the haunting call of the geese lifting off the surface of the canal. He stood for a time beside the frost-nipped reeds, his gaze on the flat pewter expanse of the water before him. He thought about the laughing, devil-may-care officer he’d once known, and of the despair Rhys must have felt when he looked his last upon this scene.
Shrugging the image away, Sebastian began to walk along the edge of the canal, crisscrossing purposefully back and forth, his gaze on the cold, wet mud oozing up between the reeds at his feet. Lovejoy’s constables had searched here before him, he knew, but he suspected their effort had been halfhearted, their explanation for the invalid officer’s death already running to seizure or heart failure.
It was some minutes before he found what he was looking for: a light blue bottle some four inches high, its stopper gone, but with the dark yellow label proclaiming LAUDANUM: POISON still largely intact. Reaching down, he picked it up, the silt-laden water lapping cold against his hand as his fingers closed around the bottle, empty now but for a faint, reddish brown smudge in one corner.
There was no way of knowing how long it had lain here; an hour, a day, a week? It suggested everything but proved nothing. Sebastian felt his fist tighten around the heavy glass with an unexpected surge of raw anger. Drawing back his arm, he hurled the bottle far out into the waterway.
It hit with a plopping splash, then sank quickly out of sight. Sebastian stood and watched the ripples fade to stillness.
Then he turned and walked away.
“Do you blame him for what he did?” Hero asked.
She was seated in the armchair beside the fire in her chamber, with Sebastian on the rug beside her. “Wilkinson, you mean?” He leaned his head back against her knee and drew in a deep breath. “I’m still not convinced he went there to kill Eisler. He could have had some other scheme in mind.”
“A way to bell the cat?”
“Perhaps. Only, events got away from him—as they have an unfortunate tendency to do.”
“And then he killed himself,” she said quietly. “To spare his family the shame of the trial, and to give his wife and child a chance at a better life without him.” He felt her fingers playing with the hair that curled at the nape of his neck. “We don’t take good care of the men we ask to risk their lives and health for us, do we? We use them, and then when they’re no longer of value, we toss them away.”
“‘King George commands and we obey,’” quoted Sebastian. “‘Over the hills and far away.’” He turned to face her, his hands coming to rest on the growing swell of her belly. “Lately, I find myself wondering what the world will be like when she grows up.”
“He,” said Hero firmly.
Sebastian laughed. “You’re certain of that, are you?”
Her lips curved into a slow smile, and he thought she’d never looked more beautiful. “Yes.”
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Author’s Note
T
he theft of the French Crown Jewels from the Garde-Meuble in Paris in September of 1792 was essentially as described here, although the involvement of Danton and Roland, while suggested, has never been proven. Napoléon’s determination to recover the French Crown Jewels, as well as the ruthlessness of the methods he employed, was likewise real.
The identification of the Hope Diamond as the recut French Blue is now generally accepted. An old lead cast of the French Blue with a label saying it belonged to “Mr. Hoppe of London,” recently discovered in a drawer in the French National History Museum in Paris, was donated in 1850 by a descendant of the Archard family. Interestingly enough, Charles Archard was both a close associate of the Hopes and one of the lapidaries tasked by Napoléon to recover the French Crown Jewels. How Hope acquired the diamond is not known, although multiple theories exist. I have chosen the one best suited to my story. It is significant that Napoléon, who surely knew more than we do about the events of September 1792, always believed that the Duke of Brunswick (father of the Princess of Wales, Caroline) had been bribed with the diamond not to attack Paris. There is also considerable evidence to support the belief that Brunswick sent his jewels to Caroline when his duchy was threatened by Napoléon, and that she sold them after his death.
Hope and Co. did indeed run into financial difficulties as a result of the war and was sold to Barings in 1813.
The recut blue diamond reappeared, briefly, in London in September 1812, exactly twenty years after its original theft, when a Huguenot lapidary named Francillon drew up a sales prospectus for a London diamond merchant named Daniel Eliason. Since that gentleman did not meet a violent death (and was as far as I know nothing like the nasty character here portrayed), I have changed his name to Daniel Eisler in making him my murder victim. What happened to the diamond after September 1812 is not known, although there is considerable evidence that it was acquired by the Prince Regent and was in his possession until his death in 1830. At that point it reappeared in the possession of Henry Philip Hope, although he always refused to divulge its origins.
Numerous books have been written about the history of the Hope Diamond; arguably the most useful and current are Patch’s Blue Mystery, Kurin’s Hope Diamond, and Fowler’s Hope: Adventures of a Diamond.
Blair Beresford is of my own creation. However, Thomas Hope’s marriage to Louisa de la Poer Beresford was much as described here. After Hope’s death, she married her cousin William Carr Beresford, the illegitimate son of her uncle the Marquess of Waterford. A general under Wellington, he was eventually made Viscount Beresford. Interestingly, he was the commander responsible for the unauthorized, disastrous attack on the River Plate region in Argentina that played a part in Where Serpents Sleep.
The Walcheren Expedition and the deadly fever that resulted from it are both real.
The grimoire known as The Key of Solomon is real. Probably written in the fourteenth or fifteenth century, it became hugely popular, although it continued to exist largely in handwritten manuscript form until late in the nineteenth century, when it was finally printed. There was a very real upsurge of interest in grimoires, or magic handbooks, in the nineteenth century. Most of those that became popular dated back to the Renaissance, for reasons Abigail McBean explains to Hero.
London’s vibrant molly underground—with its accompanying dangers of extortion and prosecution—was essentially as described here, although more vibrant in the eighteenth century than by the early nineteenth.
The Black Brunswickers were a real volunteer corps raised by Duke Frederick William, Princess Caroline’s brother, to fight in the Napoleonic Wars after the French occupied his duchy.
The life of London’s crossing sweeps was as described here, with these biographical portraits being loosely based on some of those recorded by Henry Mayhew. Mayhew’s work, which appeared midcentury, also serves as the inspiration for the collection of articles Hero is writing. Some of the crossing sweeps did indeed go to the Haymarket after dark, where they played a part in supplying girls to gentlemen in carriages.
The Abbey of St. Saviour in Bermondsey, Southwark, had almost entirely disappeared by the beginning of the nineteenth century. Besides the lay church (which still stands), all other traces vanished somewhere between 1804 and 1812. Since there is some dispute as to when, precisely, the gatehouse and its attached structures were demolished, I have taken the liberty of using them here
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