Teddy gave her a hard look. “If you are not with me, then you are my enemy. Unfortunately, I cannot leave you behind to raise the alarm.” He closed the portmanteau and directed her at gunpoint to pick it up.
The fireworks hadn’t started yet. A gunshot might be noticed, but that would do her no good if she were dead. So she did as she was told. As long as she stayed alive, she might have a chance to escape.
He motioned her toward the tradesmen’s door.
Shermont entered the estate office to search for evidence and found not only Digby, but Eleanor. They appeared to be on their way out. Both spun around at the sound of the door closing.
“Oh, Shermont,” Digby said. “Your bloody timing is fortuitous. I just caught this female stealing my sister’s jewels. I’ll hold her while you fetch the constable, but quietly, so as not to disturb the festivities.”
Eleanor dropped the portmanteau and stood up straight. “He’s lying,” she said in a quiet, dignified voice.
“Silence, thief,” Digby demanded. “She is obviously an imposter who has wheedled her way into our affections for her own nefarious purposes.”
Shermont had only a moment to make a decision. He wanted to believe her, but could he trust his heart? She could still be a foreign agent, and Digby could be sacrificing her to make his own escape.
When Shermont hesitated, Digby said, “Better yet, you keep her here, and I’ll go find the constable.” He slid the pistol across the desk, and Shermont caught it before it fell off the edge.
A bold move, especially since Shermont had decided to believe Eleanor.
“I should not be gone longer than an hour.” Digby headed toward the exit, pausing to pick up the portmanteau. “I’ll take this for safekeeping.”
“Halt,” Shermont said, raising the pistol. Once he’d made the leap of faith, the details he always drilled Carl to notice vindicated his belief in Eleanor. Digby was dressed for traveling, but she was still dressed for the ball. She looked pale and scared, while he appeared flushed and frustrated. She’d dropped the portmanteau like a hot potato, and Digby had refused to leave it behind. “Put the portmanteau on the floor,” Shermont said, the steel in his voice brooking no defiance.
Digby complied, but before Shermont could demand an explanation, the tradesmen’s door opened. Patience entered, armed and in a towering rage. Digby flashed Shermont a smug look and opened his arms to his Aunt Patience.
“Ma chère tante. Your timing is impeccable. Keep these two under guard for half an hour, and then join me at the meeting place,” Digby said as he again picked up the portmanteau. His cocky grin faded as he realized she had her weapon aimed at him.
“Leaving without me, I see,” Aunt Patience said.
“Not at all. I just said I’d meet you at—”
“And you think I believe you, you ungrateful little guttersnipe. If not for me, you’d still be wandering the streets of Paris stealing crusts of bread or prostituting yourself like your mother.”
“My mother was an aristocrat!”
“Ha! Victorine was a soubrette.”
“You said Digby met her at court.”
“He did. Aristocrats often invited actresses to their wild parties. Rent the right clothes, put on a few false airs, and they fit right in. It usually resulted in a romantic assignation and gifts of money and jewelry. Most women of the stage did it. Your oh-so-sanctified mother was one of the best.”
“You malign your beloved sister?”
“Not my sister.” Patience laughed. “I was the one with breeding who had fallen on hard times. I was the one who belonged at court. But Victorine got everything she wanted simply because she was beautiful. The vicious little bitch treated me like dirt beneath her shoe. Your father could have been one of dozens or even hundreds. She forgot one as soon as another better looking, richer, and more generous one appeared.”
“Stop it. I don’t want to hear more of your lies,” Digby said, putting his hands over his ears.
“I find it fascinating,” Shermont said. Patience had a lot to get off her mind, and he knew the longer they stayed in one place, the more likely his valet would find them. He laid his pistol on the desk, propped one hip on the top, and crossed his arms. “I’ve always said the lady with the weapon has the floor for as long as she wants it.”
Patience nodded with a smug smile. “After Victorine and her sickly baby died, I went through her possessions, hoping I could sell something to pay my long overdue wages. When I found a great number of love letters, I hit on the scheme of writing to each as if I were her, claiming the child as his and asking for money to aid in his care.”
“You mean you blackmailed them in her name,” Digby sneered.
Patience shrugged. “While I waited for the money to arrive, I had to sell her fine clothes and jewelry. Months passed until finally one wrote back and sent money. My neighbors were jealous of my bounty and were going to turn me in as an aristocrat in hiding. So I decided to emigrate to England, but I could hardly appear on Lord Digby’s doorstep without an appropriate child. So I went out and found you—filthy, dirty, snot-nosed, dressed in rags, crying on a street corner. You had the white-blond hair Digby had mentioned in one of his letters as a family trait. I promised you a good meal, and you said you would do anything I wanted. I’d say you’re lucky it was me and not some white slaver who—”
“You lie.” Digby shook all over.
“Yes, I admit I lied to you when you were a boy, but it was for your own good. Fat lot of profit in it for me. You can take the boy off the street, but you can’t take the street out of the boy. You will always be an ungrateful guttersnipe. Now hand over that portmanteau, and we’ll all go outside quietly in single file.”
Eleanor glanced at Shermont and could tell he was thinking what she was. If they left the house, they would never return.
“What happens then?” he asked.
When Patience glanced toward Shermont, Digby lunged forward, grabbed the bag, and headed toward the door. Shermont tackled him by the ankles and the two fought, rolling around on the floor. When they stood, trading blows, Patience took aim with her pistol at Shermont’s back.
Eleanor jumped forward and seized Patience’s arm. They struggled for control of the weapon, but the older woman outweighed her by a good fifty pounds and shoved her aside. She fell to the floor as Patience again took aim.
“Look out,” Eleanor cried as she got up and went after Patience again.
The pistol retort bounced off the walls of the small room, deafening the inhabitants. The echoes seemed to go on and on, but Eleanor realized the fireworks display had started outside. When the roomful of acrid smoke cleared, Teddy was on the floor, his chest a bloody mess. Shermont knelt beside him and pressed his handkerchief over the gaping wound.
Patience dropped the pistol and put her hands to her mouth, not quite stifling her cry of dismay. She turned from the sight and ran outside.
“Give me your handkerchief,” Shermont said, shrugging off his coat.
Eleanor still had her reticule looped over her wrist. When she found her handkerchief and held it out, he had covered the other man’s face with his coat. She swallowed. She didn’t have to ask if Teddy was dead.
Shermont took her handkerchief and said, “I’m afraid I’ll ruin it.”
“Go ahead.” She pressed it on him. As he dabbed at his bleeding lip and wiped his hands, she said, “Hurry. Patience is getting away.”
“We’ll deal with her later.”
As soon as his hands were clean, he tossed the handkerchief to the floor and wrapped Eleanor in a tight embrace. “Are you all right? For a moment there …” He choked up and couldn’t put into words the terror that had swamped him while Digby aimed his pistol at her.