An Earl to Enchant (20 page)

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Authors: Amelia Grey

Tags: #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Romance - Historical, #Fiction, #Romance, #Romance: Historical, #Historical, #American Historical Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Romance, #Historical - General

BOOK: An Earl to Enchant
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Mr. Warburton was a tall, robust man with a thick gray beard. The crown of his head was completely bald, but the sides and back of his head were covered with bushy gray hair. She had first met the man before she and her father left for India. While there, her father allowed her to read Mr. Warburton’s letters, and by the time he first visited them in India three years ago, Arianna felt as though she knew him. Mr. Warburton and her father had worked on many research projects together over the years.

“Please sit back down. I trust your journey from India was uneventful.”

She hesitated and then without compunction said, “Yes. It’s a long and tiring journey, of course, as you know, but not too many eventful things happened.” She had nothing to gain by telling the man she had almost died more than once.

Mr. Warburton seated himself in an upholstered side chair near the settee. “I was devastated to get your letter with the news of your father’s passing. Albert Sweet was one of the most intelligent men I’ve ever had the pleasure of knowing, and he’ll be missed by me and the Royal Apothecary Scientific Academy members.”

“Thank you for the kind words about my father.” Arianna moved to the edge of the settee. “Mr. Warburton, I must tell you that my father didn’t just pass away.”

He frowned. “What do you mean?”

“He was—my father was murdered.”

The man jerked back and blinked rapidly. “My goodness, Miss Sweet, surely you don’t mean that.”

“I do. My maid and I came home one afternoon to find his
bhagidar,
Rajaratnum, standing over his body. The man stole my father’s private journal before he fled.”

Mr. Warburton shook his head and made a clucking noise low in his throat before saying, “I find that difficult to believe. As you know, I met Rajaratnum when I visited your father in India a year ago. He was very respectful and, perhaps, even in awe of your father.”

“Nonetheless, it’s true. My maid and I saw him standing over my father’s body.”

“Good heavens! But why? Why would he do it?”

“I can only assume it was because my father was working on a formula that he had kept very secret. I think Mr. Rajaratnum killed my father and stole his journal with the formula in it because he wanted to sell the formula to someone else.”

“I knew your father was working on something he considered extraordinary, but then Albert worked on many different experiments, so I’m not sure which one you are referring to.”

Arianna felt a moment’s hesitation now that it had actually come to the point of her telling Mr. Warburton about her father’s discovery. But she had to put jumpy feelings aside and remember that her father had trusted this man, and she must trust him, too.

“My father had discovered what he thought could be a cure for consumption.”

Mr. Warburton moved to the edge of his seat. “My dear girl, that would be a very important find.”

“My father knew that, which is why when he was killed, we were already making plans to return to England for him to present his findings to the Academy. I believe Mr. Rajaratnum stole the formula either to sell to someone else or to present the findings in his own name in a country other than India.”

“That seems farfetched to me, child.”

Arianna bristled. “I am not a child, Mr. Warburton. And I can come up with no other reason why my father’s partner would betray him, kill him, and steal his private journal of formulas.”

Mr. Warburton sat back in his chair and pulled lightly on his beard. “You are right. You are not a child. I do keep up with the latest discoveries in remedies, medicines, and the like, and I can assure you no one has come forward with anything to do with consumption. That kind of news would travel very fast.”

“Good, that means Mr. Rajaratnum hasn’t managed to sell the formula, or if he has, whoever has it isn’t ready to make the formula known.”

“If anyone does, of course I’ll be the first one to go to the Royal Apothecary Scientific Academy and object to the claim on your father’s behalf.”

Arianna smiled and relaxed a little. “Thank you, I appreciate that. I hope there is something else you can do to help me, that is, for my father.”

He held up his hands. “If I can help, I will, but I have no desire to get embroiled with intrigue,” he said and shook his head, letting Arianna know he had little patience.

“Mr. Warburton, I have all my father’s research papers, books, and journals, except, of course, the one Mr. Rajaratnum stole. I was hoping you would go through them and help me either find or reconstruct the formula, and then present it to the Academy for him before someone takes the credit my father deserves.”

“Do you have all his notes from this particular experiment in one journal?”

“No. All I know is that the formula is somewhere in his papers, and they are quite extensive.”

The old man chuckled. “I would think so. He was in India a long time.”

“I was my father’s assistant long before Mr. Rajaratnum came along, and even after he joined my father, Father still allowed me to rewrite some of his papers and notes for him in a neater hand during the evenings. I can read everything, but much of it I don’t understand. I need your help to find the right formula among all his written experiments.”

“That seems as though it would be a huge undertaking, Miss Sweet, and I have my own research going on that takes so much of my time. I’ve gotten old, and I’m not as fast as I used to be.”

Arianna leaned forward in desperation, feeling her best chance of finding the formula slipping through her fingers. “But you must, Mr. Warburton. If you won’t, I will have to struggle through his papers on my own or go to someone I don’t know. I shudder to even think about my father’s life’s work being handled by a stranger.”

His eyes softened, and he pulled on the end of his gray beard again. “I understand your reluctance in doing that. Let me think on it, and maybe I can come up with the name of someone trustworthy who might be able to help you.”

“No,” she said firmly, resignation setting in. “I really can’t trust anyone but you not to take my father’s discovery and make it their own.”

He sighed heavily. “I’m afraid that’s the best I can do for now.”

“Thank you, but I think I should like to try finding it on my own first.” She rose. “I’m sorry to have troubled you.”

He stood up. “You are no trouble, dear girl. I wish I could be of more help. I’m more than willing to make inquiries for you.”

***

Overton, Gibby’s stiff butler, stood to the side and allowed Morgan to walk into the house.

“Would you like me to make you a cup of tea, Lord Morgandale, or perhaps you’d prefer something stronger?”

“No, thank you, Overton. I’ll just sit in the drawing room and wait for Gib.”

Morgan had sent Gibby a note yesterday, saying that he would be around to see him late in the afternoon today. But sometimes Sir Randolph Gibson lived by his own rules. He was just as likely not to be home, even if he knew to expect you. But thankfully he hadn’t played the disappearing act today.

Morgan rounded the doorway into Gibby’s drawing room and was immediately struck by all the bright colors he saw in the room. The bold, cheerful fabrics immediately brought Arianna to his mind. Not that she wasn’t already constantly in his thoughts and had been since the evening she arrived at his door, looking like a weary waif.

He didn’t know why, but he’d never really noticed the décor of Gibby’s drawing room until today. It was spacious and filled with dark wood furniture that was covered in embroidered silk fabrics of astoundingly vibrant colors and patterns in shades so rich and striking that he decided they must have come from the Orient.

The only window in the room was framed with a strikingly bright shade of red draperies. Each velvet panel was tied back with large gold velvet tassels, exposing fancy lace panels covering the panes.

Morgan sat on the chair he had always used, but this was the first time he’d ever noticed that the bright green fabric had a red and black embroidered dragon on the seat and back. He tried to remember the last time he’d been in Gibby’s home; it had been several months at least.

Looking around, he wondered if he’d been inattentive of his surroundings through the years or whether the old man had recently redecorated. And if he had, why had he gone to the brilliant colors of the Orient? Morgan remembered the life-size statuaries of Venus and Athena that held up the marble mantle that graced the ornate fireplace. The gold-framed mirror over it was shaped like a large pagoda, so if he had refurbished the house, he hadn’t changed those. Morgan couldn’t remember ever having seen such vivid reds, yellows, and greens in upholstery before. But with a closer inspection, he could see the fabrics showed signs of aging. Most were frayed and worn.

Suddenly, Morgan knew Gibby hadn’t changed anything. He had the same furniture, the same paintings and sconces on the walls, and the same figurines and lamps on the tables that he’d always had.

Morgan had changed. He never noticed color until Arianna. Because of her, Morgan was looking at everything in a new light.

He reached into his pocket and withdrew the empty bottle of perfumed water that he carried with him. He pulled out the stopper, closed his eyes, and inhaled the scent of Arianna. He chuckled to himself and recapped it. Every time he opened the small jar and breathed in, he swore it would be the last time.

Had she left the container on purpose to remind him? To tempt him? It was almost empty. Maybe Arianna left it because she had another, or several, and didn’t need it. Maybe she expected the maids would simply throw it away. Or had Arianna known the servants would give the remnants of the perfumed water to Mrs. Post and that she would bring the bottle to him for direction? Had she wanted to leave a memento of her time with him? She needn’t have bothered. There was no way he could forget her scent or the taste of her.

He looked closely at the bottle for the hundredth time. It had strange writing on it. He could only assume it was the contents of the bottle written in one of the languages of India. When he left Gibby’s house, he planned to take it to his apothecary and have the man find someone who could read it, and then have more made for her.

Whenever Morgan thought about the last thing he said to Arianna when they were on the coast, his gut wrenched. Had he really told her to find someone else to take her maidenhead? What kind of fool was he? What madness had possessed him that night? That kind of folly was taking honor too far. She had been in London over a week now. What if she had taken his words to heart and had already found someone to oblige her? His stomach tightened with anger.

What if she…

“Morgan, what’s wrong?” Sir Randolph Gibson said, striding into the room with a curious expression on his face and looking as fit as a man half his age.

“What? With me? Nothing!” Morgan said, rising from the side chair.

“There must be. Last I heard you were going to winter at Valleydale, and now here you are back in London.”

“I was, but now I’m not,” Morgan said, giving Gibby a brief hug and a clap on the back as he tried to push Arianna from his mind.

“So the tranquility of the countryside got to be too much for you, and the debauchery the city offers lured you back into its clutches.”

Morgan grinned. “Not exactly.”

The old man’s eyes brightened and sparkled. “Then what’s her name?”

Morgan laughed but didn’t say anything. Gibby had always been too damned clever.

“All right,” Gibby said, “You don’t have to tell me her name. I’ll find out soon enough.”

And he probably would.

“You are what brought me to London.”

“Me?” He raised his thick gray eyebrows. “Don’t tell me; let me guess. You were sent here to mind my affairs.”

“Someone probably needs to, but I prefer to say I’m here to monitor your affairs.”

Gibby smiled, showing unusually straight and healthy teeth for a man in his sixties. “When Blake and Race went missing for a few days last week, they went to see you, didn’t they?”

Morgan nodded. “They came to see me.”

“And what did the guardian fools tell you that made you want to hightail it back to London before the first frost?”

“That there are adult twins in town who look just like you did when you were a much younger man.”

The old man’s eyes widened, and he leaned back in the settee as if startled. “There are?”

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