A Fatal Waltz Read online

Page 14


  “What are you doing?” Jeremy whispered.

  “We’re being followed.”

  “By whom?”

  “Mr. Harrison.”

  “Is he in here?”

  “I don’t know.” I looked around, but did not see him. “If he’s not, he’s waiting for us to come out.”

  “So are we to spend the rest of the morning in church?”

  “It will be good for your soul, Jeremy.” We sat quietly for approximately three minutes.

  “I’m bored,” he said.

  “Your attention span is astonishing. I’ll ask something that will amuse you. What do you think of the countess?”

  “She’s gorgeous, obviously, in that devastating, self-assured, sophisticated way,” he said. “Smart too, from what I hear. An experienced woman of the world.”

  “A nightmare.” I sighed.

  “You’re not jealous of her?”

  “Maybe a bit.”

  “Does Hargreaves know?”

  “No! Telling him would make me feel even less devastatingly sophisticated, self-assured, and experienced than I already do.”

  “You’ve no need for worry.”

  “I know. It’s just—” I stopped. “We’ve known each other since we were babies, Jeremy. Can I speak freely?”

  “Of course. Shock me at will.”

  “You’re…experienced. Do you ever regret the loss of a former mistress?”

  “Em, this is a conversation you do not want to have.”

  “I can’t imagine that it’s possible to simply stop loving someone.”

  “Most mistresses are just amusing games.”

  “I don’t think Colin plays amusing games,” I said, tipping my head back and looking at the vaulted ceiling.

  “He’s quite good at chess.”

  “You’re not being helpful.”

  “No, and I can’t be on this count,” he said. “He’s the only one who can ease your mind.”

  “I don’t want him to think I doubt his fidelity.”

  “Do you doubt it?”

  “No.”

  “Then why do you feel threatened by the countess?”

  “Not because I think he would go back to her, but because I’m afraid that in comparison, he may find me a disappointment.”

  “Highly unlikely, darling.”

  “I’d very much like to believe you.” I glanced around, but saw no sign of Mr. Harrison. “Do you think it’s safe to leave?”

  “Impossible to say.”

  “Perhaps we should just return to the Imperial.”

  “Let’s stay here,” Jeremy said. “As you said, it’s good for my soul, and the morbid bit of me would like to see the relics.”

  “They have a piece of the tablecloth from the Last Supper.”

  “Right. Undoubtedly purchased from some dubious medieval merchant. Besides, I’m looking for bones.”

  “We could tour the catacombs,” I said, and took him by the hand. We walked past Saint Valentine’s chapel, which held the cathedral’s reliquary, and headed straight for the catacombs, which we found inaccessible to tourists. Inaccessible, that is, until Jeremy made it worth the while of a caretaker in possession of a useful set of keys. He admitted us for a fee, and we found them dank and gruesome and everything one would want such a place to be.

  “I hope my bones don’t wind up heaped in a stack under some church,” Jeremy said. “Or maybe I do. It’s rather romantic down here.”

  “Romantic? Hardly. And I don’t think you need fear for your bones. You couldn’t keep them out of the family vault if you tried.”

  “Unless I run through my fortune and die penniless in Vienna.”

  “You’re not profligate enough to manage that,” I said. “But if by chance you somehow do become that corrupt, I promise to see to it myself that you have a shelf of your own down here. I won’t have your skull piled in a heap.”

  “You are generosity itself. If only you’d be so kind to me while I’m still alive. Instead you’re bent on breaking my heart.”

  “I didn’t think you had a heart, Jeremy.”

  “Neither did I.”

  I CAUGHT NO SIGN of Mr. Harrison when we left the Stephansdom. Even so, we returned to the Imperial before continuing our mission, taking extra care to be certain that he was no longer tailing us. While Cécile and I caught up on the events of the morning, Jeremy spoke to the manager of the hotel, who quickly agreed to increase security near our rooms. After a quick luncheon, we set off again.

  Before that afternoon, I had never seen neighborhoods like those found on the count’s list. As a girl, I had accompanied my mother when she visited tenants on my father’s estate, but their happy, well-tended cottages did nothing to prepare me for the dire conditions in which Vienna’s poor lived. The houses aspired to the finery of those in the city’s best neighborhoods, with corniced windows and elaborate decorative detail. But this did nothing to hide laundry hanging from windows, garbage strewn across sidewalks, the stench of decay defying the freezing temperatures, and gardens covered with soot from the factories that surrounded the area. Children dressed in little more than filthy rags ran through the streets when they should have been in cozy rooms eating something hot.

  It took several hours for Jeremy and me to find all six addresses, our task made more difficult by the heavy snow. And when we did find them, Herr Schröder’s compatriots, tucked in their dingy, cold houses, proved unwilling conversationalists.

  “It was naïve of me to think they would talk,” I said, stepping over a pile of hideous-smelling trash in an alley. “How could these people ever trust us when we allow them to live in these conditions?”

  “It’s hardly our fault.”

  “It will be should we do nothing to improve their plight.” I looked across the street at a girl who was leaning against a building. Her dingy coat barely covered a threadbare dress, and she wore no gloves.

  “Looking for someone, sir?” she asked, in English untouched by the slightest hint of an Austrian accent.

  Jeremy tightened his grip on my arm and walked towards her. “Do you know Franz Kaufman?”

  “Maybe.” She winked at him. “But you’d have more fun with me.”

  My breath caught in my throat as I tried to look nonchalant.

  “Shock your friend, did I? Or is it your wife?” She crinkled her nose. “Imagine a gentleman wouldn’t bring his wife to this sort of neighborhood.”

  “Are you English?” I asked.

  “My mother was.”

  Without thinking, I handed her my muff. “You must be freezing.” She batted it away.

  “I don’t need no charity from you.”

  “Don’t be a fool.” Jeremy pushed it back at her. She smiled at him, revealing a surprisingly bright set of teeth.

  “Why’re you lookin’ for Kaufman? He in trouble again?”

  “What sort of trouble is he prone to?” I asked.

  “Don’t know that I could say,” she said, burying her hands deep in the muff’s fur. She stared at me for a moment, but the hardness in her eyes did not thaw. “Thank you.”

  “It’s nothing,” I said. “What’s your name?”

  “Rina.”

  “I’m Emily.”

  “Lady Emily Ashton?” she asked. I nodded. “There’s a gent been around here inquiring about you. Harrison was his name.”

  “What does he want?” I asked.

  “Best I know, he wants to find out who you’re looking for. Word’s gotten around that anyone who talks to you will face a heap of trouble.”

  “Are people scared of him?”

  She shrugged. “Not really. They’re more scared of Schröder. But I guess you know that. That’s why you’re here, isn’t it?”

  “Did he send you to watch me?” I asked.

  She laughed. “I hate him more than anyone.”

  “Why?” I asked.

  “Don’t see why I should tell you.”

  “I’m looking for information that
could save the life of an innocent man in England. Will you help me?” I asked.

  She pursed her lips and blew out a long breath, then motioned towards Jeremy. “Is he going to protect me if I do?”

  “Of course I will. You’ve my word as a gentleman.” Jeremy gave her a quick but smart bow.

  She laughed. “Don’t know what good that is, but I’ll take it just the same.”

  “Do you know Stefan Gross?” I asked. “I’m trying to find him. Or perhaps Jacob Reisner?”

  “You’re wasting your time with that crew. Schröder’s the only one who knows anything. Do you know a beisl called Ofenloch? It’s a restaurant two streets from here.”

  “Yes, I noticed it as we passed.” Jeremy tugged at his gloves.

  “He goes there most every night.”

  “Can you find out if he’ll be there tomorrow?”

  “I don’t talk to him,” she said. “He killed my father.”

  JEREMY WAS SILENT as we made our way back to the Imperial. “Are you all right?” I asked.

  “There was something about that girl…. I don’t know what it is…she looks so familiar, but I can’t place her.”

  “Bainbridge!” Colin stepped across the Kärntner Ring in front of the hotel and shook Jeremy’s hand before kissing mine. “Where the bloody hell have you had my fiancée all afternoon?” He kissed my hand again, his eyes full of teasing warmth.

  “Oh, you know Em, she’s been running me around all day in search of justice. Tedious girl. Don’t know how you tolerate her.” He looked at my face as he spoke, but did not meet my eyes.

  “You’re a beast, Jeremy. But thank you for accompanying me. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”

  He stared down at his feet, then looked into my eyes. “Right, then. I’ll be off if you’re quite done with me.” The moment he’d disappeared into the hotel, Colin pulled me close and kissed me.

  “You’re lovely with the snow falling all around you,” he said. “But I’d best get you inside before you freeze.” As we turned to the entrance, I saw Jeremy standing in the doorway, watching us. He saw me looking at him and came back out, his face red as he rushed past us and made his way down the street. I called out to him, but he did not stop. Colin grabbed my arm when I started to follow.

  “Let him go.”

  “But I—”

  “This is difficult enough for him, Emily.”

  “You don’t think that he—” I stopped, looked after him. “No, Colin. You’re wrong.”

  “Believe what you want, my dear, but this is one case where I know better than you.”

  Chapter 14

  Maudlin,” Cécile said, tossing aside a collection of Goethe’s poetry. We were in the sitting room of our suite, taking tea. “I much prefer something French.” Odette, singing a mournful-sounding aria, came in with our mail, which she handed to Cécile. “Nothing from England for you today?” she asked her maid.

  Odette did not reply, only increased the volume of her song as she disappeared into her mistress’s bedroom.

  “You see what I suffer?” Cécile said. “Your butler is ruining my peace of mind.”

  “I can accept that so long as Klimt is keeping you happy,” I said.

  “I like him because he has no expectations. We’re perfectly suited to each other, at least for the moment.”

  “What about after the moment?”

  “Why would I bother to even begin thinking about that? I’m not looking for a grand passion, Kallista. I had that once and don’t want to suffer through it again.”

  “You’ve never told me this,” I said. “Who was it? I know not your husband.”

  “Non, not him. It was a long time ago, but not long enough that I’m ready to think about him again.”

  “Do you still love him?”

  “Non.”

  “Not at all?”

  “Perhaps a very little bit. That’s the trouble with grand passions, bien sûr. You can never entirely cleanse yourself of them. It’s best to avoid them altogether.”

  “So who was this grand passion?” I asked.

  “Someday I will tell you the story, but no time soon. It’s too frustrating.”

  “I don’t like to see you frustrated,” Colin said, coming into the room.

  “You, Monsieur Hargreaves, are divine.” She offered him her hand, which he kissed before sitting next to me. “Not only to say that, but to come in at the exact moment I want the subject of our conversation changed.”

  “I’m glad to be of service, and you, madame, are enchanting as always.” He accepted the tea she poured for him. “I’ve figured out Harrison’s game, and the stakes are higher than I thought.”

  “What is it?” I asked.

  “He’s trying to draw England into a war with Germany. A few years ago he was involved in a failed plot to persuade the crown prince to overthrow his father.”

  “Rudolf?” I asked. Colin nodded.

  “Obviously nothing came of it. The goal had been to see the prince, who was much less sympathetic to the kaiser than his father, on the throne. Rudolf would then abandon Germany and ally Austria with England and France. Fortescue was always opposed to the scheme, so far as I can tell. Didn’t think it particularly mattered who Austria is allied with.”

  “Did you know that Rudolf wrote pieces for Wiener Tagblatt?” Cécile asked.

  “The newspaper?” I asked.

  “Oui. A very liberal newspaper.”

  “What did the emperor think of that?” I asked.

  “I don’t believe he knew,” Colin said. “Did he?”

  “He did not,” Cécile said. “Rudolf published under the name Szeps. His father would not have agreed with much, if any, of what he wrote.”

  “So Harrison and his crew tried to convince him to stage a coup?” I asked.

  “Yes,” Colin said. “But they failed.”

  “How would this lead to war now?” Cécile asked.

  “Germany is becoming increasingly aggressive in her nationalism, and there are many who believe war is inevitable,” Colin said. “Harrison seems to have abandoned his plan to gain Austria’s support and is instead trying to instigate some sort of incident that will precipitate a major conflict between nations.”

  “But that makes no sense,” I said. “First he thought we needed Austria’s support, now he doesn’t?”

  “He knows he won’t get it. So he believes we should fight now, before Germany and her allies grow more powerful.”

  “Are you quite certain nothing came of his earlier plot?” I told them about the letter I’d seen on the empress’s desk. “From what I read, it sounded as if the French and English were involved with Mayerling.”

  “It’s possible that Harrison has a French ally,” Colin said.

  “Could you ask the empress about it, Cécile?”

  She sighed. “I don’t think it is a good idea. She’s fragile, and dredging this up will only cause her more pain.”

  “But if she’s looking into the matter herself—,” I began.

  “So far as I know, she’s learned nothing new in more than a year. And before that, she learned almost nothing. She’s a mother grieving the loss of a child and is desperate for there to be an explanation more significant than a lovers’ suicide pact.”

  “But what if she’s right, and what if we could find the truth?” I asked.

  “Right now we need to focus on Harrison and Brandon,” Colin said. “If what happened at Mayerling is related, we’ll figure it out. But I don’t think it’s necessary to disturb the empress at this point.”

  “Lord Fortescue controlled those around him with blackmail. If he had evidence that Mr. Harrison had anything to do with the crown prince’s death—”

  “—Fortescue would have absolute control over him,” Colin finished for me.

  “And now that Fortescue is dead, Mr. Harrison is free to pursue his agenda,” I said. “How convenient for him.”

  “Harrison didn’t kill Fortescue. He was
standing next to me when we were shooting.”

  “He might have hired someone else to do it,” I said.

  “Possibly.” Colin nodded, but his face revealed not the slightest hint of agreement. “But I find it hard to believe that an assassin would use a dueling pistol from his victim’s house.”

  “Why not? It makes it look like an ordinary murder,” I said.

  “An ordinary murder? You’re becoming entirely too corrupt, my dear.”

  “Isn’t that why you love her?” Cécile asked.

  “Among other things.” He smiled.

  “I’ve read enough sensational novels to know that it’s perfectly reasonable to begin a murder investigation by ascertaining what individuals benefit from the victim’s death,” I said. “Clearly Mr. Harrison has benefited. Robert has not.”

  “They believe his motive was anger, not that he stood to gain something,” Colin said.

  “You don’t believe that he’s guilty, do you, Monsieur Hargreaves?” Cécile asked.

  “Of course not. But Emily wouldn’t be happy if she didn’t have someone playing devil’s advocate.”

  “No one else at Beaumont Towers stood to gain from Lord Fortescue’s murder. Poor Mary’s going to once again be dismissed from her home,” I said. There was a small dowager’s house on the estate, and it was to there that she would be banished once her husband’s eldest son descended to collect his inheritance.

  “Harrison is a likely suspect, but if we’re to consider the murder as assassination, we need to look at all of Fortescue’s political enemies.”

  “All of Britain and most of the Continent,” I said.

  “Unfortunately close to the truth.” He had stopped pacing and rubbed his forehead. “I’ll see what I can dig up.” He kissed me quickly and nodded at Cécile. “I must go. I’ve an appointment I cannot miss. Will I see you tomorrow?”

  AS HAD BECOME MY HABIT, I went to the Griensteidl early the next morning, and spent more than an hour happily studying Greek and drinking hot chocolate. I’d neglected my studies since Robert’s arrest, and even now felt pangs of guilt at being so pleasantly employed when my friend was suffering in Newgate. Friedrich was sitting with me, reading classified ads from the newspaper out loud.