How to Catch a Duke (Rogues to Riches #6) - Grace Burrowes Page 0,78

any closer.

Besides, she’d seen Lord Stephen watching Miss Abbott across a hand of piquet. Of all the inconvenient, outlandish impossibilities, the statuesque inquiry agent had caught Lord Stephen’s fancy.

She was tall enough to partner him well, whereas Harmonia…

“Is Lord Stephen your choice for Nicky’s step-papa?” she asked evenly. “His standing is appropriate, he’s wealthy, and he’s held in high esteem at Horse Guards. His limp is the result of an injury rather than a defect of birth. He’s witty, and he’s good-looking. I could do much worse.”

Stapleton gestured toward the tray. “Pour me another cup, and don’t be impudent.”

“There’s more,” Fleming said.

“What could be worse than that blasted woman attaching herself to a ducal heir?” Stapleton asked. He watched Harmonia pouring out, his lips pursed. “Unless she’s blackmailing him. Wentworth is the sort to have secrets—perhaps he’s a bastard, perhaps his older brother is a bastard. They both have the look of the baseborn knave, and God knows their antecedents were sordid. Miss Abbott makes her living unearthing secrets. Why would she be seen in Wentworth’s company unless she coerced him into the outing?”

“She’s biding at the ducal residence,” Fleming said, “as a guest. That’s not what you need to concern yourself with now.”

Harmonia put the second cup of tea—strong enough to scald the rust off a rapier—on the blotter before Stapleton.

Miss Abbott was biding with the Wentworth family and accompanying Lord Stephen to his first fancy dress ball in ages. Perhaps this was, in fact, a good thing. Perhaps it was cause for rejoicing. Though probably not. Papa-in-Law was wroth, and that was always a very bad thing.

“Fleming,” Stapleton began, “you have airs above your station if you think yourself capable of deciding which among endless pressing obligations I should concern myself with. A marquess, a peer of the realm whose title dates back to—”

“My house was searched,” Fleming said. “I spotted Lord Stephen with Miss Abbott, and within days, my house was searched. Nothing was stolen, but I suggest you check the contents of your safe and the location of any sensitive papers.”

Harmonia pretended to sip her tea, though she could taste nothing. This whole business was growing too complicated. She could only guess what Stapleton was about, and she wanted no part of it.

Stapleton left the seat behind his desk, swung the marchioness’s portrait forward on its hinges, and opened the safe.

“The money’s all—blasted hell. Blasted, infernal…” Stapleton reached into the safe, though Harmonia could see plainly enough that it held only money and jewels.

No papers. Poor Papa-in-Law.

“You put him up to this,” Stapleton said, advancing on Fleming. “You put that Wentworth jackanapes up to stealing back your sister’s vowels and my entire store of leverage in the Commons.”

“I wish I had,” Fleming replied, pushing to his feet. “But the Wentworth jackanapes, as you refer to him, can barely negotiate a set of steps, and I have no means of making a ducal heir do anything. You have many, many enemies, Stapleton, no friends, and only a handful of paid-for allies. You had best be careful about whom you accuse of what.”

Oh, that was well done. Just a hint of boredom in Fleming’s tone, a hint of amusement—and a hint of threat.

And if Papa-in-Law no longer had Lady Roberta’s vowels…Harmonia rose and smoothed her skirts.

“You gentlemen will doubtless wish for privacy if you’re to discuss delicate matters. I’m expecting my portraitist for an afternoon sitting, so I will leave you to your plotting.”

Fleming bowed cordially, while Stapleton closed the safe and positioned the painting over it.

“I am not plotting, Harmonia,” Stapleton said. “The Abbott woman must be dealt with. I had thought to negotiate with her, but she’s clearly intent on getting above herself. Don’t be like her. Keep to your place, or I’ll give you cause to regret it.”

Harmonia merely stared at him. He’d apparently set Fleming to spying on Miss Abbott and Lord Stephen. He’d collected up the vowels of various MPs as a means of buying votes in the lower house of Parliament. He’d even ensnared Fleming in his intrigues by virtue of buying Lady Roberta’s gambling debts.

Now he was threatening Harmonia before a witness, and not with a long holiday in the north.

She tipped her chin up, rather than let Stapleton think her cowed. “I beg your pardon, Papa-in-Law.”

“What I do,” Stapleton said, “I do to safeguard the boy’s future. I owe him that future, and so do you.”

The marquess was much given to pomposity, but in that last pronouncement Harmonia heard only

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