Heiress for Hire - Madeline Hunter Page 0,51

way. It might be best. As a partner I might have to eat with you and the duke and be bored. As an employee I can eat with the servants and actually learn something.”

“As my employee you must inform me of anything you learn.”

“Are you going to pay my fees? If not, I am not an employee. We are only pretending.”

He thought about that. “If your fees are reasonable—”

“Twenty pounds.”

“Twenty pounds?”

“A day.”

He laughed. “No one is going to pay a woman that much for anything.”

“Is it too much? Oh, dear. I should have learned the expected amount, I suppose. What are your fees?”

He didn’t answer. Not twenty pounds, apparently.

“It might be best if we left it at pretending,” she said. “I will inform you of anything I think you need to know.”

That was not what he had demanded. “We will need a name for you. It would be best if you are not known to my cousin as a legatee, just yet.”

“I will be Mrs. Rupert. That will be easy for all of us to remember, since I live on that street. Ah, there is Elise in front of the church, waiting for my return. I will keep her from being with others, lest she give away the ruse.”

* * *

They collected Minerva’s friend, Miss Turner, from the churchyard, and their baggage from the small inn. Chase hired a man to return the gig to its owner, then hired a carriage to take them all to Melton Park.

There he handed the women over to the housekeeper, calling them guests so they would receive good chambers. Once they were gone, he headed for the library. He found Nicholas standing in its doorway, watching the skirts go up the big staircase.

“Who are they?”

“One is Mrs. Rupert and the other is her companion, Miss Turner. Mrs. Rupert does some small inquiries for me on occasion. The sort it is better to have a woman do.”

“I assume she is the gray ensemble with intelligent eyes, and not the pretty one in blue.”

“The pretty one in blue is not for you, if you were thinking that way. Mrs. Rupert would not look kindly on any interference with that girl.”

“She looked to be at least twenty. Hardly a girl, although she has a freshness to her. It was charming how she gawked at the reception hall’s appointments.”

“Whenever I see all those African masks, I’m inclined to gawk too.” He threw himself onto a divan and stretched out his legs. “I visited Edkins today.”

“Uncle’s valet? How is he?”

“Flourishing. He has a fine property on a good bit of land with a lake in back. He spends his afternoons fishing for his dinner. He did well.”

“One more person who benefited handsomely. Between those who came into money and those who didn’t, the list of motives only gets longer.”

“How much easier if he had done it the normal way and left it all to you. No one would have liked that, but it is so commonplace I doubt the family would be arming themselves for battle now.”

“Perhaps he wanted to spare me the effort to figure out all the allowances they would all expect of me. Did Edkins have anything of interest to reveal?”

He saw a female visitor here that day. He did not know why he chose not to share that yet. It felt disloyal. He knew in his blood that whatever had happened, Nicholas had played no role. Yet he had been equally sure of another man once only to learn he was wrong. He hated how being disillusioned once had him guarding information now.

“I will invite Mrs. Rupert and her friend to dine with us,” Nicholas said. “It will be a distraction from all of that.” He gestured to a stack of papers on a desk.

“Tomorrow, perhaps. Tonight she dines below so she can meet the servants.”

“Do you think she will learn something new? The magistrate was most thorough in questioning them.”

“If you were a young footman or chambermaid and you thought you might have heard something in the night but were not sure, would you admit as much to that magistrate? After he questioned them, most of the women left the study in tears.”

“Do you believe they might confide in Mrs. Rupert instead?”

“Possibly, if there is anything to confide to begin with. She has a way about her that seems to encourage it.”

“You speak of her with admiration in your voice.”

“She is very useful.”

“Useful, is she? How practical. She is also very attractive. Captivating eyes.

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