Finally Philip spoke. “I greatly regret disappointing you, my lord. If you wish me to resign, you have only to say so.”
Lucian heard the misery in the younger man’s tone, but had no idea what might have caused it. He raised an eyebrow in puzzlement. “What the devil are you talking about? You haven’t disappointed me, as far as I know.”
“You didn’t trust me enough to divulge your changing the date of the latest gold shipment.”
Lucian felt a cold chill squeeze his chest. Events had been quiet of late, perhaps too quiet. Two shipments of gold bullion had been safely delivered to the allies on the Continent, and nothing had been heard from the treasonous Lord Caliban.
“I never changed the date,” Lucian said slowly. “Suppose you explain yourself.”
For the first time his subordinate looked confused. “But the letter…”
“What letter, man?” Lucian demanded impatiently.
“The letter you wrote authorizing the change in schedule.”
“I wrote no such letter.”
“My God…” An expression of horror seized Philip’s features. “The gold is gone, then… It was retrieved yesterday, on your order.”
Lucian rose to his feet, feeling dread boil up inside him. “I think I should see this letter.”
Delivering gold to fund the war effort was not a complex process: the London mint issued gold coinage, which was conveyed to the Bank of England and then shipped out under heavy guard to the Continent to meet troop payrolls and make payments to the countries of the Triple Alliance so they would continue to fight on Britain’s side. The transfer process had rarely failed until now.
The bank manager was unnerved to see Lord Wycliff and alarmed to think the gold had been consigned into the wrong hands. “But… but the l-letter of authorization seemed absolutely g-genuine,” he stammered.
“Allow me to see it, please,” Lucian demanded tersely.
With a murmur of distress, the manager signaled for an underling to fetch the letter. When it was presented in short order, Lucian grimly scanned the contents.
For purposes of national security, I am authorizing a change in date of the next scheduled shipment of gold. My agents will call the morning of October 5th at ten A.M. to receive the strongboxes.
Lucian Tremayne, Earl of Wycliff
His stomach roiling, Lucian passed the letter on to his subordinate. There was no question in his mind, though. The shipment was gone. Three strongboxes of new sovereigns-over a hundred thousand pounds’ worth-stolen effortlessly, without a drop of bloodshed or strife. No bloodshed yet, Lucian amended, his mouth tightening with fury. Such a sum would permit Napoleon’s armies to continue their slaughter of the allied forces for weeks.
“This does appear to have been written by you, my lord,” Philip said, his tone flat with dread.
“Yes,” Lucian replied through gritted teeth. “An excellent forgery.”
The manager wrung his hands in misery, looking as if he might cry. “I confess I thought the change odd, my lord, but the letter seemed to be in order- and it bore your seal.”
Taking the letter back, Lucian inspected the now-broken wax wafer, which had indeed been imprinted with the Wycliff seal. An imprecise warning thought teased the back of his mind, but before he could make sense of it, the manager launched into a spate of profuse apologies.
Brusquely Lucian thanked him and dismissed the man with a curt wave.
“Do you suppose it is the work of Caliban?” Philip asked when they were alone.
“Who else?” Lucian retorted grimly. “But he obviously had assistance from someone within our offices. Only two people besides you and myself knew when the next shipment was to take place, and I would trust both of them with my life.”
“Then who could have gained access to the schedule? And pulled off such a precise forgery?”
Lucian frowned. “One of our clerks might have accomplished it,” he said slowly. “Who wrote out the copy of the schedule?”
“None of the clerks, my lord. On your orders, I myself copied the original, but I had not yet delivered it to the bank. Both schedules are locked in my desk.”
“Locks can be picked, Philip. Which clerk usually performs such tasks?”
“Normally Jenkins,” Philip murmured, clearly dismayed.
“So he would have known the plans for the gold shipments that were stolen earlier this year? Before we took the responsibility from him?”
“It would seem so.”
Lucian turned abruptly on his heel.
“Where are you going, my lord?” Philip called after him.
“To hunt down our traitor.”
Evening had fallen by the time they researched an address and located the flat of Mr. Charles Jenkins, a senior clerk employed in the intelligence section of the Foreign Office. Lucian planned to withhold judgment until he could conduct an interrogation, but any doubts about the clerk’s complicity were dispelled the instant the door was opened; Jenkins took one look at his callers and bolted.
He reached a window and managed to raise the sash partway before Lucian caught him. Spinning the man around, Lucian threw him up against the wall and took hard hold of his cravat.
“Did no one ever tell you it is bad form to turn your back on visitors?” Lucian queried, his silken tone edged with steel.
Jenkins’s face contorted with fear as he panted out a question. “What… do you want, my lord?”
“I believe you have something to confess.”
“Confess? I don’t… know what… you mean-”
His grip tightening, Lucian twisted the cravat. Jenkins clawed at his throat but was no more forthcoming.
“Who paid you to forge the letter?” Lucian demanded, losing patience.
“What… letter?”
Enraged by the clerk’s brazen equivocation, Lucian hauled the man back to the window and shoved his head through the opening, giving him a good look at the dark cobblestone alley three floors below. “You’ll find it a long way down.”
Jenkins made a mewling sound.
“Tell me who hired you.”
“I can’t! He will kill me…”
“What do you think I intend to do to you?”
When the clerk only whimpered and shook his head, Lucian lifted him by the belt and shoved; his torso went through, then his hips. Lucian stopped shoving at midthigh, holding his victim solely by one ankle.
Jenkins screamed in terror as he found himself dangling over the precipice. “All right! I will tell you what I know!”
Lucian waited another moment before pulling the terrified clerk back inside. Jenkins sank to a trembling heap on the floor, holding his throat and eyeing his assaulter with dread.
“I advise you to keep to the truth,” Lucian said after a moment, when his rage was better under control. “You’ll be hanged for treason unless I can be persuaded to show leniency.”
The clerk visibly swallowed and nodded his head.
“Was it you who divulged the schedules of gold shipments months ago?”
“Y-yes, my lord.”
“I suppose you have an excuse for betraying your country and sending countless good men to their deaths?”
The clerk’s expression twisted into agony. “I never meant… I needed money badly to pay my debts… and my mother… They threatened her life, said they would kill her if I didn’t obey. I swear I didn’t realize the gold would end up in French hands.”
“You didn’t realize?” Lucian repeated contemptuously.
“No, I did not! I was only told to supply the schedule.”
“But you understood your crime quite well after the first theft, considering the uproar at the Foreign Office.”
Jenkins hung his head in shame. “Yes,” he whispered. “But by then it was too late. I was in too deep.”
“Very well, tell me who is masterminding the gold thefts.”
The clerk’s expression turned earnest. “I don’t know, my lord. I was merely an underling. I heard his name mentioned once-Lord Caliban-but I never saw him.”