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A Scoundrel in the Making (The Marriage Maker Book 9) by Tarah Scott (6)

Chapter Six

Through the coach window, Abigail watched their approach to Caithis Castle. The castle, built by Mr. Russell’s family in the late seventeenth century—thirty years after Cromwell’s death, according to Mr. Russell—was a square stone tower house that rose high above the trees.

Bittersweet memories rippled through her of traveling this road with her father to visit his brother. On sunny days, they stared out the coach windows and each tried to be the first to spot a goldfinch or, in spring, a robin. On rainy days—which were her favorite—her father hugged her close to his large body to keep her warm and told her stories of the mother she never knew, or tales of a princess in a faraway land. 

Her father always allowed her to ride on the right side of the carriage so that she had a clear view of Caithis Castle as they passed. She’d often dreamed of exploring the castle and finding every hidden passageway. But her father’s brother died, and his home was inherited by a distant cousin who coveted her father’s title as marquess. Her father severed the connection, and the cousin was forgotten, along with her fantasy of discovering Caithis Castle’s hidden secrets.

They turned up the drive and passed through the arched gate. Caithis Castle would be a welcome diversion from prowling Lochland Manor, where Victor awaited her in her dreams, and her father, in the manor’s halls.

She had no real hope of locating the Honors. That Mr. Russell happened to have had a two-week house party planned at the time The Raven wanted him watched posed too great a coincidence for Abigail. She suspected that The Raven had simply given her something to do—for which she would be eternally grateful, as it got her out of Lochland Manor. Still, the hunt would be interesting.

Three carriages stood in the drive near the castle’s main entrance. Other guests for the house party, no doubt. Had Lord Reade already arrived? Butterflies skittered across the insides of her stomach. Why did the mere thought of the man make her as nervous as a schoolgirl? She found him attractive. What woman wouldn’t? Even Fanny claimed him to be almost as handsome as her husband. But Abigail was too old to be taken in by a handsome man with piercing blue eyes, broad shoulders and a deep voice as smooth as velvet.

Abigail grimaced. Of course, she would notice that, because he was the perfect combination of those things. Not to mention, he had a brain. But she would never let him know she’d noticed.

Her carriage slowed, then stopped behind the other three. The footman leapt from his perch beside the driver, opened her door, and took her hand as she descended the steps. Abigail tracked her gaze up the tall building. What would her father think of the fact that her childhood fantasy to learn every nook and cranny of Caithis Castle had come true?

To Abigail’s relief, she managed the welcome from Mr. Russell and his wife and reached her room without encountering Lord Reade. Her bedchambers were decorated in the medieval fashion with a curtained canopy enclosing the four-poster bed. Thankfully, instead of a medieval bench, two modern wing backed chairs sat before the low-burning fire. The perfect place to sip brandy and watch the flames. She grimaced. Such an activity would leave too much silence for thinking. She would borrow a book from Mr. Russell’s library. A perfect excuse to begin snooping about before dinner.

She began to unpack the belongings in her valise, undergarments, which she lay folded in the chest of drawers to the right of the bed. The footman would bring her trunk, which contained the dresses she would hang in the modest wardrobe in the corner to the left of the window. Guests would continue to arrive well into the evening, which meant people would be milling about the castle. How many guests had Mr. Russell invited? The castle likely could sleep twenty easily, and there would be those to stayed elsewhere. That meant it wouldn’t appear strange for her to be found ‘exploring’ the castle.

Abigail glimpsed the small leather pouch tucked into the inside pocket of the valise. They contained two locks picks. On the ride from Lochland to Caithis Castle, she’d given much thought as to where Mr. Russell might hide the crown jewels of Scotland. Chances were, she would have to pick a lock or two.

At four and a half feet long, the Sword of State couldn’t easily be hidden. Mr. Russell considered himself a direct descendant of Cromwell. If he really did have the Honors, he would want to be able to see them, to gloat that he had accomplished what Cromwell hadn’t. A thought struck and she paused in pulling the valise closed. Dear God, surely he wouldn’t destroy them as Cromwell had intended to do. Might he have already destroyed them?

Nae. She closed the valise and put it into the wardrobe. According to the Raven, there had been no sign of the metal or jewels being sold. Search Caithis Castle. If the Honors were here, she would find them. The most obvious places they might be concealed were in a hidden passageway or room off Russell’s study or bedchambers. She would have to search his bedchambers when she could be assured he was occupied elsewhere. A card game with Lord Reade. Perfect. That would keep both men out of her way. For now, she would find the library.

Her room was on the second floor, which housed other guests. Abigail opened her door and stepped into the hallway. Empty. She needed to find the nearest staircase leading to the third floor. She left the room and began walking down the hallway the opposite way she’d come. Two guests emerged from a room four doors down. A stairway came into view on the left. She maintained her stroll and nodded casually as they passed. She reached the stairs, servant’s stairs, given the narrow width and uneven steps, and headed up. She reached the third floor. The first door she opened had to be the lord’s room. A massive four poster bed dominated the wall to the right. Opposite the bed, a low fire burned in the hearth. To the right of the hearth, sat a small desk.

Abigail peered around the door. A large wardrobe dominated the left-hand wall. It could easily hold the sword. But nothing was ever that simple. Still, she itched to look in the closet. With a quick glance into the empty hallway, she hurried to the wardrobe and opened it. Clothes. She shoved the coats, pants and shirts aside and found only the sides and back of the wardrobe. Abigail sighed. Just as she thought. Not that easy. She faced the room. Might she have time to search this room? Maybe. Maybe not.

She tried the next room. The lady’s chambers, as expected. Across the hall, she found the library. Mr. Russell clearly had wealth. The mahogany desk at the far end of the room was twice the size of her father’s cherrywood desk. Bookshelves lined the wall to the right. A divan, chairs and card table created a cozy seating arrangement in front of a hearth with a low burning fire.

She pulled the door closed behind her and hurried to the desk. A quick search turned up the usual: bills—some a year old. Clearly, like so many of the ton, he disdained the working man. Next, she searched the shelves for traces of a hidden passageway. Any door that might open would have to consist of a panel the length of one of the shelves, which, at three feet, would allow easy access for Mr. Russell’s six foot height.

Abigail began with the shelves nearest the desk. By the time she reached the end of the bookshelves, forty-five minutes had passed. She surveyed the room. Wood paneling covered the wall around the hearth. She began on the right side of the fireplace, running her fingers along the edges of the ornate paneling. Two panels down from the hearth, she detected a depression the size of a fingertip. Her heart picked up speed as she pressed the spot.

A tiny click sounded and the panel sprang free an inch. Abigail eased the door open and stared at narrow steps that spiraled down into darkness. The opening would be tight for Mr. Russell, but he could manage it. She turned and scanned the room for a taper. Several sat on the mantle. She lit two from the fire in the hearth, then returned to the stairs.

She ducked and stepped onto the first step. Carefully, she turned, searched the wall and found a small latch to the right of the door. Given how easily the door opened, she would wager the passageway was well used. Still, she would rather take precautions against getting locked inside. She withdrew the handkerchief she carried in her pocket, folded it in quarters, then placed it over the latch. Slowly, she pulled the door closed. The handkerchief kept the latch from catching.

Anticipation hummed in her belly as she turned and carefully descended the stairs.

* * *

Reade thanked the footman who showed him to his chambers, then closed the door and surveyed his room. A bed, nightstand, small wardrobe, secretary, and two chairs in front of the hearth provided adequate accommodations. He wondered if Mr. Russell might play cards. He certainly could afford to lose a few thousand pounds. Sir Stirling had promised that plenty of wealthy gentlemen who could afford to lose money would attend this house party. Lady Buchman clearly had no intention of him taking any great part in the search for the Honors, which meant he would be left with plenty of time to gamble. 

What were the chances of them actually being able to discover information on the whereabouts of the crown jewels? He hadn’t seen Lady Buchman amongst the guests who mingled in the parlor. He snorted. Knowing her, she had already begun the hunt. She had her prey. He had his.

Reade set his valise on the bed and unpacked his clothes, then went downstairs. After an hour of mingling, concern niggled when Abigail didn’t make an appearance. It would be difficult to keep up appearances as lovers if they were seldom seen together.

He meandered into the garden. Gray clouds muted the afternoon sun, but he walked until he reached the arboretum, then followed the tree line around the west side of the castle. Reade veered back toward the castle’s main door. The clouds had darkened and the air smelled of coming rain. Fewer days were more perfect for reading in the library than today. He’d brought his copy of Description de l'Égypte. Thank God, Napoleon had allowed the scientists and scholars he’d taken with him into Egypt to publish their findings.

Tonight, after he retired, he would study more of the book. His heart expanded with the memory of the drawings of the pyramids. How small the men who’d stood before the massive structures must have felt. Once he’d gotten Robert out of debt—and was certain his brother wouldn’t fall prey again to his gambling compulsion—he would travel to Egypt and see every last one of the discoveries made by Napoleon’s scholars.

Could he ever truly be certain Robert wouldn’t gamble again? These last six months, he’d been true to his word and hadn’t gone anywhere near a card table or gambling hall. But a lifetime lay ahead of them. With every unexpected knock on the door, Reade feared news that Robert once again sat hunkered over cards in a desperate attempt to win back losses he couldn’t cover. Any such losses now would put Robert and his family on the streets.

“I believe you have made a mistake, sir.” A woman’s loud protest intruded upon the morose thought.

Lady Buchman.

“On the contrary,” a male voice replied, “no mistake at all. Lady Buchman, Abigail, you and I will get on famously.”

“I have no intention of marrying you, sir. Now stand aside. “

“Come now, sweet. Let me show you what I have to offer.”

“If you show me what you have to offer, I will slice it off at the root.”

Reade broke into a run. He rounded the castle an instant later and came to a sudden halt at sight of Lady Buchman as she dropped to a squat, snaked a foot around a man’s ankle and yanked. The man—Lord John, Reade realized—landed on his arse like a sack of potatoes.

“I warned you,” she muttered.

Fury contorted John’s mouth and he shoved to his feet. Lady Buchman took two quick steps beyond his reach.

“You little witch.” He started toward her.

Reade strode toward them. “I would think twice about that, John.”

John whirled to face him. “What are you doing here, Reade?”

“Like you, I am a guest.” Reade continued past him and stopped at Lady Buchman’s side. She didn’t look as if she’d been manhandled. Reade faced John. “Was there something more you wanted?”

He shot a venomous glare at Abigail, spun, and strode away.

Reade waited until he disappeared from sight, then looked at Abigail. “Are you unharmed?”

She frowned. “Of course, I am unharmed. He lay on the ground, not I.”

He had seen that, and the move interested him. It seemed female spies learned a trick or two about taking care of themselves. Still...

“Aye, my lady. I see you have a penchant for walking in gardens alone.”

“What—” She narrowed her eyes. “For your information, the night I met you I fled to the garden.”

“If I recall, a gentleman was pursuing you.”

“That is correct,” she said.

“Just like today,” he said.

She shrugged. “It isn’t my fault the world is filled with foolish men.”

“I would say it is you who are foolish.”

“Thankfully, I care nothing for what you think.”

“So I see,” he murmured. “What were you doing in the garden alone this time?”

Excitement sparkled her eyes. “I found a secret passageway leading from Mr. Russell’s library to the garden.”

“I suspected your absence meant you’d already begun your investigation. Do you think it advisable to enter secret passageways alone?”

“I encountered no trouble in the passageway.”

“Of course not,” he said. “Shall we return to the castle?” He winged an arm. 

Unlike most women, who placed their hand in the crook of his arm, she grasped his arm and held tight as she kept pace with his stroll toward the open balcony doors.

“You know Lord John,” she said.

“Aye. We played cards last week.”

“Did he lose?”

“Only a hundred pounds,” he replied.

“Still a tidy sum,” she said. “Though nothing compared to what you won at Lady Bingley’s party.”

“Fortune favored me that night,” he said.

“I suspect it had little do with fortune.”

He looked sharply at her.

“A man doesn’t win that consistently at cards unless he is skilled,” she said.

He returned his attention forward. “I am a fair player.”

“More than fair, I wager.”

“Did you discover anything of interest in s

“The door leading into the passageway was in good working order, and I detected little dust on the stairs.”

“Any idea who occupies the two rooms connected to the passageway?”

She shook her head. “But I will find out.”

“Is your plan to simply search the entire castle?” he asked. “That seems rather daunting.”

“I will try to glean clues from Mr. Russell first.”

“He isn’t likely to tell you outright that he stole the crown jewels of Scotland. That’s treason.”

She laughed. He liked the sound. “You would be surprised at what people will do and say,” she said. “If I get him drunk enough, he might tell me anything.”

Reade would wager they would have to be in bed for that to be the case. Even drunk, unless Russell was distracted by her beautiful body, he wasn’t likely to give away a secret that could land him in prison for life.

They rounded the keep wall on the south side of the building where the balcony was located. Half a dozen guests came into view walking from the lawn toward the balcony. They neared the first two men and Reade caught the knowing glances the men sent their way.

Lady Buchman must have seen them, as well, for she angled her head gracefully and said, “Gentlemen.”

“You’re encouraging them,” Reade whispered as they ascended the stairs to the balcony.”

“That is the idea,” she replied.

It was. Oddly, that bothered him.


 

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