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Thick As Thieves
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Belgrave House
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Copyright ©1992 by Joan Smith
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THICK AS THIEVES
Joan Smith
Chapter One
"Bother!” I declared, glancing at the calendar. “Is it the end of May already? The butcher's bill is due, and my pockets are to let."
Aunt Hennie looked at me in alarm. She knew I had recently inherited thirty thousand pounds. Prior to this tremendous piece of luck, both sides of my family were mired in genteel poverty.
It was Papa's second wife who brought him a fortune, and obligingly died before him. Lorene was a mean old bint, and I am not hypocrite enough to shed crocodile tears for her passing. I was truly shaken when Papa died a year later. I still miss him. Of course, I miss him a little less every day. It is ironic that Lorene's entire fortune came to me, whom she thoroughly disliked. I spent a year in Cornwall mourning Papa's death, then sold the house and traveled to London to place myself on the Marriage Mart. That was a year ago now, and I am still Miss Denver.
I had no idea it would prove so difficult to purchase a husband. It seems that in order to meet gents of the first stare, one must first make her debut at Court. In order to be presented to Queen Charlotte, one must have the proper connections. We made very few social connections in Cornwall. The fact that I am five and twenty is another obstacle. The mamas are yanking their daughters out of the schoolroom at a younger age every year.
While I rooted through my purse, Aunt Hennie looked at the opulence surrounding us. My saloon was crowded with expensive cast-off furnishings of nobles who were obliged to hawk them to pay the grocer. Indeed, a satinwood commode had been added to the superfluity only that week. It cost me fifty pounds, and is worth a hundred easily. I snap up any such bargain I see, with the plan of removing to a larger mansion next year. On the walls there gleamed gilt frames holding paintings, not all of them good, but all done by fasionable and expensive artists. The Persian carpet beneath our feet had the honor of being trod on by a duchess last season.
"Must you pay the butcher today?” Hennie asked.
"I pay the merchants every six months, whether they dun me or no. I certainly must pay the butcher. He told Cook he is being married next week, and asked for his money."
"Perhaps I could lend you..."
I smiled indulgently. I knew to a penny that my aunt had a miserable two thousand pounds, which gave her roughly two pounds a week pocket money. How did she manage to look respectable on that pittance? I want to augment Auntie's fortune one of these days. She adamantly refuses to accept a salary for acting as my companion, saying that rack and manger are more than enough. I know she enjoys living in London—who would not, after the confinement of a small vicarage in Cranbrook? Auntie's late husband was vicar of St. Martin's.
"Not necessary, Auntie,” I said. “It is a temporary shortage. I shall hawk a piece of jewelry.” I swallowed a smile to see her goggle at this strategy. What a mousy little thing she was, all squinty gray eyes, gray gown, gray hair. Sometimes I forget she is even in the room.
"Could you return the satinwood commode?” she asked doubtfully.
I laughed merrily. “I could not part with Lord Hutching's commode. I got it at a terrific bargain from a used-goods dealer in Shepherd's Market. I spotted a pawnshop right next door. We shall go there and place a piece of jewelry I never wear on the counter. Lorene used to take jewelry as collateral for loans. Half the time she got stuck with it. I shall use Mrs. Minton's ring. It has a good-sized diamond, but with a chip out of the corner."
I went up to my room to get the ring out of the safe and get my bonnet. I spared a peek at myself in the hall mirror before entering the saloon. No wonder Auntie found it hard to believe the fashionable dame staring back at me was short of money. I looked the picture of wealth, in my dashing feathered bonnet and teal blue walking suit with a fichu of Mechlin lace. Diamonds sparkled on both hands. The temporary financial shortfall did not hamper my spirits either.
I had been calling myself twenty-one for four years, and meant to continue this ruse until I found a husband. My dark hair, worn in a loose, fashionable coil, was touched with copper from the sunlight entering at the window. My green eyes were not so brilliant as emeralds, but the comparison was not laughable. My figure was good. I was always the energetic sort who preferred walking to driving, and riding to walking or any other mode of transportation.
One thing that displeased me about London was the poor, shambling rides available at Rotten Row. If I do not marry a gentleman who has a country estate soon, I shall buy a little country property close to London, just for the pleasure of riding.
"I don't know what your papa would say if he knew we were going to a pawnshop,” Auntie said with a daring smile when we were cutting through the London traffic in my dashing tilbury.
"A good thing he does not know,” I replied airily. “Do not judge me by your high standards, Auntie. I pay my bills, and do no harm to any man. We live differently in London, but we are not the dissipated creatures you think us. Where is the harm in borrowing money when you know you can pay it back?"
"I did not mean to criticize, dear,” Hennie said hastily. “I know you are good. You handed that beggar a whole guinea the other day on Bond Street, and you are generous with your servants, to make up for your sharp tongue. Charity covers a multitude of sins."
Hennie's compliments usually come with a sharp edge. “Perhaps it is my self-indulgent life that appalls you? Theaters and drives..."
"Oh no! I never had such a wonderful time in my life. I shall never forget it."
A smug smile seized my face. I had done pretty well for a provincial solicitor's daughter. That was Papa's occupation when he met and married Lorene Hansom. She and Papa happened to be in London on business at the same time. They met at their hotel, and before you could say Jack Robinson, they were married. She had inherited mines and things from her papa.
I could not abide Cornwall after Papa died. I lived there only seven years, but they were the years from eighteen to twenty-four, when I should have been meeting potential husbands. In Cornwall I never met a man I would want to spend an afternoon with, let alone a lifetime.
All that stifling tedium was over now. I was in London; I owned the elegant mansion I occupied on South Audley Street, and a small apartment house in town as well. Foster, my man of business, suggested I buy it with a small down payment and let my tenants pay off the mortgage.
The carriage drove south on South Audley to Curzon Street, turned south again, and we were suddenly in Shepherd's Market. It was a mean, narrow lane lined with mean establishments. The few men loitering about were not the sort ladies wished to encounter. A mangy yellow cur was hunched at one doorway, looking about with a hungry eye. I pulled the check string and asked the groom to have the owner come out to me. When in doubt, I take it as a rule of thumb that the ladylike thing to do is whatever is most comfortable for myself.
A moment later his head peered through the window. “Oi, the name's Parker,” he said, offering a not very clean hand. He was a fall-faced commoner with dark hair and beady eyes, the sort of man Papa would have called an oiler.
"I want to leave this ring in your safekeeping for a few days,” I said. “I shan't take less than a hundred and fifty pounds, mind. It is worth a dozen times that. Th
e stone is ten carats if it is anything."
Parker removed his head and the ring into the sunlight, stuck a loupe in his eye, and examined the stone. I noticed his finger touching the little chipped corner. Very likely he would use that as an excuse to bring down the price. His head reappeared and he said, “I can let you have fifty for it."
I reached out my hand. “Not interested, thank you. There are plenty of reasonable dealers about."
"We'll split the difference, missus. Seventy-five,” he said, still holding on to the ring.
I wiggled my fingers imperiously. “Return my property, if you please. I could not possibly accept less than a hundred."
"A hundred it is then,” Parker said, muttering for my benefit that he was a fool.
"I shall retrieve it in a week. Mind you don't sell it."
Parker drew the agreement up, right there in the street. He shoved a piece of paper into my hand, drew a roll of bills from his pocket, and counted out a hundred greasy pounds. I gave him the ring, and we were off.
"You always want to ask for fifty percent more than you will take,” I explained to Hennie. “I could have got one twenty-five out of that fellow, if I had held out a bit longer.” I glanced at the chit he had given me, and snorted. “Fifty percent interest per annum on the loan! Highway robbery! Let it be a lesson to me. Now, Hennie, where to? A scoot through Hyde Park to see the smarts and swells? Or shall we go to Bond Street for a bit of shopping?"
"Let us go to the park,” she said. She was afraid the hundred pounds would never reach South Audley Street if I was let loose in a shop with the money. I do shop more than is necessary. At first, I needed a good many fashionable items. Now it has become a habit. When a lady has such a small circle of friends, shopping is one of the few genteel pastimes available to her. On that afternoon, however, we just drove to Hyde Park, and watched the ton disporting themselves.
It was always an agony to me, yet I kept at it. I felt very much an outsider when I saw the handsome young people talking and laughing together. They seemed to form a charmed circle, and I was the perpetual outsider. The few times I seemed about to crack society, I learned that my beau was a gazetted fortune hunter. One man I met at the theater, the other here at Hyde Park. I was not so eager to join the golden circle that I was willing to pay for it with Lorene's fortune.
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I was not the sort of lady who had to wait until quarter day to receive my allowance. I had money invested in half a dozen different ventures. Interest checks and rent checks arrived at odd times of the year and month.
It happened that some bonds Foster talked me into came due two days later. “Let us go and retrieve the ring,” I said to Hennie, and we were off to Shepherd's Market again.
Over the duration of her visit to London, Hennie's scruples were beginning to lose their razor edge. She was curious to see the inside of a pawnshop, and as neither dangerous loiterers nor dog impeded the visit, she allowed herself to be talked into going inside.
"You never know what treasure you might find at a good price,” I explained. “A little out-of-the-way shop like this, hidden in the middle of a good neighborhood, might have some interesting jewelry. I should like to pick up an amethyst brooch to go with my new violet gown.” I turned to the groom. “Walk the nags up to Curzon Street, Topby, and be back in ten minutes. We plan to have a look at the wares inside."
We went into the shop, and were immediately plunged into a foul-smelling darkness. The narrow window at front illuminated the first few yards of the shop, but the counter, farther back, was dim. I recognized Mr. Parker, however, and he recognized me. He was haggling with a customer who had a pile of trinkets displayed on the counter.
In the dim light, it was impossible to assess either the worth of the objects or the appearance of the man. He had the well-modulated voice and good accent of a gentleman, but I was not interested in a gentleman sunk to selling the family jewels. He was selling, not pawning. A price was struck; the man took his money and left. As he walked toward the brighter front of the shop, I saw that he was blond, young, and rather handsome.
When I directed my attention back to Parker, he handed me Mrs. Minton's ring. I first thought it was the dim light that made it look so dull. Then I ran my finger over the edges, and felt a smoothness all around. “This is not my diamond!” I said.
He looked at the little tag he had attached to it. “Surely it is, madam. You are Miss Denver, ain't you?"
Hennie paid us little heed. It was only to be expected that some altercation would arise. Aunt Hennie insists I enjoy a good argument. It is a rare day when even so simple a purchase as a bonnet or an ell of muslin could be completed without coming to cuffs with the clerk, but I maintain it is not my fault. In London, everyone and his dog are out to gyp you. You have to stand up for your rights or you will be palmed off with inferior seats at the theater, inferior food in restaurants, and inferior service wherever you go—all at ridiculously inflated prices.
"I tell you this is not the ring I left with you,” I repeated, my voice rising.
"Be reasonable. Miss Denver,” Parker said patiently. “It is exactly the same ring. Try it on; you'll see."
"Nonsense. You have pried out the diamond and stuck in a piece of glass. You don't catch me with an old stunt like that. I'll have my diamond, or I'll have the constable down on you."
"Are you threatening me?” Parker growled. His face had turned ugly.
"Yes, sir, I am!” From the corner of my eye, I noticed the pile of jewelry left on the counter by the other client. An emerald ring had become separated from the rest, sitting near me. It was edged in diamonds down either side. I was taken with it and thought I might buy it, if Parker were not such a crook.
He turned aside. “Get her, Duke,” he said in a low voice. A black dog as big as a sideboard rose up from the floor. He wiped his slavering lips with a long tongue and made a lunge at me. Parker still held the leash. “Better get out while you can,” he said, with an evil grin.
I don't know where the idea came from, for I am really not a thief. I think it was Parker's sly, triumphant grin that goaded me to indiscretion. Without quite knowing what I was doing, my fingers closed over the emerald ring. “You have not heard the last of this, sir. I'll be back with a constable."
Parker released the dog, and Hennie and I darted to the door. A whistle called the dog back to his master.
I was trembling like a blancmange when we reached the street, and safety. “The crook!” I squealed.
"Eve, are you sure he stole your diamond?” Hennie asked.
"Of course he did, but he did not get the better of me!"
"What do you mean?"
I held out my hand and opened it, displaying the emerald ring. “You stole it!” Hennie gasped.
"I did not! I exchanged it for the diamond he pried out of my ring."
"But the poor man who hawked it—he will want it back."
"The fellow was selling it. I overheard the whole thing. Parker gave him a hundred pounds for it, the same as he allowed me on my diamond. They are of equivalent value, obviously."
"Oh my goodness. I feel weak.” A vicar's widow, reared up in the countryside, had never before encountered this rough sort of justice.
Before she could succumb to a swoon, there was an awful bellowing behind us as Parker discovered my stunt and was after us, holding the black hound of hell on a rope. “Where is Topby?” I exclaimed.
"You told him to drive to Curzon Street. This way, run!” We took to our heels as fast as our legs could carry us.
"Stop them!” Parker hollered.
Looking ahead, I saw a constable fast approaching from Curzon Street, directly in our path. I grabbed Auntie's hand and pelted across the street. In my haste, I bumped into a man who was just about to ascend his carriage.
"Sorry,” I gasped.
A blue arm came out to steady me. I glanced up, and saw a harsh face staring down at me. The face was lean and tanned. A pair of gray-green eyes,
the very color of the Atlantic on a stormy day, looked startled.
"Are you all right?” he asked.
I looked over my shoulder, where Parker was gaining on us. From the other end of the lane, the constable was coming. He would find the emerald on me and arrest me. Visions of the Old Bailey and Bridewell flashed through my mind. I used Hennie's advance to nudge up closer to the gentleman.
"Don't let us detain you,” I said, taking Hennie's arm to hasten her along. My other hand hovered over the man's pocket, and I slid the emerald ring into it, brushing against him to conceal the movement of my hand.
"Where to, Mr. Dalton?” the man's groom called from his perch.
"Hyde Park,” Dalton replied.
I saw him glance at the approaching constable, and wondered at his lack of curiosity in leaving at this exciting juncture. If it were me, I would have waited to see what was going forth. In fact, I was struck with the notion that Mr. Dalton was in a hurry to escape himself. Perhaps he just did not want to be involved as a witness in some unsavory case. “Are you sure you're all right?” he asked.
"We're fine, thank you,” I assured him.
He climbed into his coach and it rattled off. I was glad the nice man got away before I was utterly disgraced, but I still thought it odd.
The constable and Parker reached us at the same time. “Arrest her. She's robbed me of an emerald ring,” Parker said.
"There is your thief!” I retaliated, pointing at Parker.
A loud and excessively vulgar wrangle ensued. We went into Parker's shop to escape the gawking crowd. Hennie and I endured the indignity of having our reticules and pockets searched. I gradually got the idea that the constable had some familiarity with Parker's unsavory reputation. His attitude seemed to be that if someone had got the better of him, so much the better.
"We'll leave it up to the courts,” he said. “You, madam, can bring a charge against Parker. And you, Parker, can do likewise, if you want to be bitten to death by lawyers. It is up to you. Do you want to lay charges, folks?"