Nothing happens to any man that he is
not formed by nature to hear.
Marcus Aurelius, a.d. 120—180
London
A fortnight later
“Are they quite certain it’s my father?” Andrew Ramsey asked as he stood at the window in the study of his Mayfair town house and stared out at the darkened sky, watching as the spring downpour flooded the streets.
“Local fishermen found the Lovely Lady abandoned and drifting off the coast of Ireland. And when the bodies of a man and a young lady matching your father’s and his companion’s description washed ashore several miles down the coast, the magistrate went down to investigate. He knew George personally and he identified his body.” Drew’s companion shook his head. “The weather is usually so mild. I’m sure no one thought that it would rain for so many days here or that there would be a storm of that magnitude at sea.”
“The magistrate could be mistaken.” Drew turned to face his father’s longtime friend and solicitor, Martin Bell, and realized Martin was already wearing a black mourning band on his sleeve.
“I’m sorry, Drew, but there was no mistake. The man was wearing these.” Martin reached into his jacket, withdrew a package, and handed it to Drew.
Drew unwrapped the brown oilskin paper to reveal a gold watch and fob on a chain and a signet ring.
The air rushed out of his lungs and he sat down on the edge of his desk as his knees wobbled beneath him. “Christ, it’s true.”
Drew lifted the watch and opened the lid. He waited for the familiar sound of the minuet that played when the lid was opened and the quiet, efficient ticking, but the watch was silent. Its hands were permanently stopped at forty-three minutes past three. Drew stared at the inside of the cover and the exquisite miniature of his mother painted there before he carefully closed the lid and turned the watch over. The inscription on the back leaped out at him: To my darling George, on the tenth anniversary of our wedding. With love from your adoring wife, Iris. Drew swallowed hard, then placed the watch on the desk and regarded the ring engraved with the crest of the marquess of Templeston.
“What was he doing yachting off the coast of Ireland? He should have been here for the Season.” Drew closed his fingers around the ring and clenched it tightly in his fist.
“He said the London Season bored him,” Martin replied.
“Nevertheless he should have known better than to go sailing alone. That boat was too big for him to handle on his own.”
Martin rubbed at the wrinkle lines in his forehead, took a deep breath, then slowly expelled it.
“George was an excellent sailor and at any rate, he wasn’t like other men. He was special. He lived each day to the fullest.”
“I knew my father as well as anybody, Martin. And to George Ramsey, living each day to the fullest meant avoiding obligations and postponing any plans for the future.”
“He didn’t schedule every moment of his life,” Martin admitted. “George was carefree. Spontaneous.”
“Unlike me.” Drew shot Martin a knowing glance.
“Unlike you,” Martin agreed. “But that doesn’t mean your father shirked his responsibilities. He was a very wealthy man and he understood his duty. He left you a very large estate.” Bell studiously concentrated on wiping the lenses of his gold-rimmed spectacles with a snowy white handkerchief.
“Damn it, Martin, I don’t care about the size of his estate or anything on it,” Drew said. “I would rather have him alive.”
“That goes without saying,” Martin said softly. “But part of my responsibility as your father’s solicitor is to inform you of the size of your inheritance along with the other details of his will.” He stepped forward and took a sheaf of folded papers and a black armband out of his coat pocket and offered them to Drew.
Drew accepted the black armband but motioned for Martin to put the papers away. He’d known his father was going sailing, but Drew didn’t know there had been an accident until the Irish authorities sent word that two bodies, identified as those of the marquess of Templeston and his lady friend, had washed ashore. Drew had learned of the tragedy yesterday afternoon and he still found it hard to believe that his father would never return.
He appreciated Martin’s loyalty and dedication to his duty, but Drew wasn’t ready for the finality of the reading of his father’s last will and testament. “Don’t bother,” he said as he pinned the mourning band around the sleeve of his jacket. “I know, almost to the ha’penny, how much my father was worth.”
Martin looked surprised and a little alarmed, as if he wondered whether Drew had suddenly become excessively greedy.
Drew hastened to allay Martin’s unease. “I’ve been handling his investments for him for years. The older he got, the less he wanted to concern himself with mundane financial dealings. He was happy to let me handle things.”
“He enjoyed all life had to offer.”
“Especially opera singers thirty years his junior,” Drew replied with an edge of bitterness. “Mary Claire.” He leveled his gaze at Martin. “Her name was Mary Claire. Father mentioned that he planned to take her sailing on his new yacht. We were having dinner at the club several weeks ago and he told me he had to be backstage at the opera in time to present Mary Claire with her bouquet of flowers.”
Martin nodded. “He didn’t live a celibate life before he met your mother. Did you expect him to live one after she died?”
“Yes. No.” Drew opened his fist and slipped the signet ring on the ring finger of his right hand. It looked and felt foreign there. He shoved his hands into the pockets of his jacket and paced the confines of his office. “No, I didn’t expect him to be celibate. But I expected him to show better judgment. He was King’s Bench.”
“George Ramsey was a man first and a judge second,” Martin defended his old friend.
“Yes, well, in this instance, he should have been a judge first.” Drew swallowed the lump in his throat. “If he had shown a measure of the judgment in his private life that he was famous for in his public life, then maybe he’d still be alive.”
“And maybe not,” Martin pointed out. There are no guarantees in life. If he hadn’t gone sailing, George might have lived to a ripe old age, but we don’t know. Perhaps this tragedy was meant to be.”
“Why?” Drew demanded.
“I don’t know why. Nobody knows why. It’s God’s will.”
“It wasn’t just God’s will,” Drew said. “It was Templeston’s will. He shouldn’t have taken a yacht that size out alone—especially in rough seas. He had a crew. Why didn’t he use them? Because he was the marquess of Templeston. Because he wanted a private outing with his mistress. Because he thought he could defy nature and go against the odds.”
“The locals said the weather was perfect for sailing when George left the shore.”
Drew ignored Martin’s defense of his father. “He was always seeking excitement and adventure, always leaving chaos in his wake.”
Martin studied the younger man. “You sound angry.”
Drew paused. “Not at him,” he said finally. “Only at the senselessness of his death.” He wasn’t angry with his father for drowning. The marquess hadn’t wanted to die any more than Drew had wanted him to. Drew didn’t blame him for dying.
But he was deeply disappointed by his father’s lack of forethought. Drew was disappointed because the marquess had shown a typical disregard for his safety and that of the young opera singer. And beyond leaving his estate and all his personal responsibilities for his only son and his oldest and dearest friend to sort out, George Ramsey, fifteenth marquess of Templeston, hadn’t planned for the future.
And Drew could only suppose the young opera singer had left her financial affairs in disarray as well.
He raked his fingers through his hair and turned to face Martin, who was carefully hooking the legs of his spectacles over his ears. “What about the young woman? What do we know about her other than her name and occupation?”
“Nothing,” Martin told him. “The Irish authorities say no one has come forward to claim the body. I have Bow Street interviewing the ladies from the opera, but they’ve yet to come up with any information that might help us locate relatives.”
Drew leveled a stern look at the older man. “Make funeral arrangements for her. She can be buried along with my father.”
“Here in London?”
Drew shook his head. “No, at Swanslea.”
“You’re the new marquess and it’s your decision to make, but burying a gentleman’s lady friend on the family estate is a bit unorthodox. Are you quite certain you want to do it?” Martin was clearly surprised by Drew’s unexpectedly generous offer.
“Swanslea is our country seat. If we keep the funeral small and quiet and restrict the guests to family and close friends, I see no reason for anyone to object as long as she’s buried along with, not alongside, the marquess—unless you’ve found a marriage certificate for the two of them among my father’s papers.” Drew paused, noting with irony that where the late marquess was concerned, hope sprang eternal in his heart. He hoped his father had bowed before the rules of convention one last time and secretly married the opera singer.
Martin shook his head. “No marriage certificate. But…”
Drew expelled the breath he hadn’t realized he was holding. “Well, Martin, that’s that. We’ll go ahead with it.”
“Drew…”
“I think we should arrange a place for her nearby with a simple marker. Her name and the birth and death dates should be appropriate. Provided we can ascertain the date of her birth.” Drew was willing to go against tradition and bury his father’s mistress in the family plot, but he wouldn’t have the young woman buried beside the marquess unless she had a legal right to be there.
He removed his timepiece from his waistcoat pocket, opened it, and glanced down at the face. Unlike his father’s, Drew’s watch was plain. There was no miniature, no inscription, and no minuet, only the relentless ticking of the hands urging him to go forward, to move on with the business of life. “We can go over the terms of my father’s will when I return from Ireland.” He smiled at Martin. “But I don’t have time to do it now, Marty. I have to announce my father’s death to the House of Lords and take my place as the new marquess of Templeston in less than an hour, and I need a moment to think about what I’m going to say to my father’s friends and colleagues. How about it, old friend? Why don’t we continue this sad family business some other time?”
“I’d like to, Drew, but before you make arrangements to hold the funeral at Swanslea Park there’s something you should know. Something important.” Martin reached out and touched his young friend on the sleeve.
“Well?” Drew frowned. “What is it?”
“There is a codicil to your father’s will. He named several. There was more than one.”
“More than one what?”
“Ladybirds.” Martin cleared his throat. He couldn’t bear to use the term mistress.
“On the yacht?” Drew asked, his mind racing frantically, wondering how many more mistresses he might have to have buried in the family cemetery.
“Oh, no,” Martin reassured him. “On land.”
Drew breathed a sigh of relief. “How many?”
“He mentioned five. In addition to the young opera singer, there’s a milliner in Brighton. An actress in Paris. A seamstress in Edinburgh. And a young woman in Northamptonshire.”
Drew frowned at his father’s oldest friend, a nagging suspicion forming in his brain. “Where in Northamptonshire?”
“In the cottage on Swanslea Park.”
“He kept a mistress at my mother’s family home?”
“Your mother’s been dead for fourteen years, Drew. And she left the estate to George. It was his to do with as he saw fit,” Martin reminded the younger man.
“He saw fit to keep a mistress in residence at Swanslea Park?” Drew turned and grabbed his hat from a polished brass rack.
“There were extenuating circumstances.”
“I don’t care. And you may be assured that her days in the cottage are now numbered.”
“Drew, you can’t. George’s will specifically states that as the new marquess, you are to provide for his ladybirds and become the legal guardian of any issue thereof.”
“Oh, I’ll provide for them. All of them. But I’ll not provide the cottage at Swanslea Park.”
“Drew, you don’t understand—”
“Unfortunately, I’m afraid I understand all too well.”
He frowned. “I hate to ask you to handle her eviction, old friend, because I’d rather like having the satisfaction of doing it myself, but you’ll have to go to Swanslea before I leave for Ireland immediately after making my address to the House of Lords.”
Martin shook his head. “I can’t go to Swanslea.”
“I want her removed from Swanslea, Marty.”
“I understand, Drew,” Martin replied, “but it’s my duty to see that your father’s wishes are carried out the way he wanted and I cannot go to Swanslea and to Ireland.”
“I’m going to Ireland, Martin. It’s my duty.”
“No, it’s my duty,” Martin said. “In accordance with your father’s wishes, I’m to see to his return.”
He held up his hand when Drew would have argued. “It’s the way George wanted it and I’m duty bound to carry out his wishes.”
Drew jammed his hat onto his head and headed for the door. “Then, I’ll be leaving for Swanslea Park directly following my address to the lords.” He paused in the doorway and gave Martin a grim smile.
“We can’t have one mistress overseeing the burial of another. There will be no end to the gossip if I allow her to remain in residence on the estate.”
“Drew, you can’t evict her.”
“Of course I can,” Drew said. “I’m the new marquess of Templeston and Swanslea Park is my home. My father’s mistress will simply have to find a new pigeon and another place to roost.”
Chapter Two