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Synopsis
When the Duke of Blackford enters her bookstore, Georgia knows the Archivist Society is in need of her services. The Tsar of Russia and his family are visiting Queen Victoria on the auspices of the engagement of the Russian princess Kira to the son of the Queen's cousin. When Kira's bodyguard is found dead on a train returning from Scotland, the Queen calls on Blackford to discreetly protect the princess and prevent an international incident.
The Russian royalty refuses help in finding the murderer, suspecting anarchists and demanding every extremist in London be hanged. But that is far from the English way. To get the job done, Georgia must go undercover as Kira's English secretary. She soon discovers that anarchy isn't the only motive in the case—and that someone is determined to turn royal wedding bells into a funeral dirge.
Release date: July 7, 2015
Publisher: Berkley
Print pages: 304
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The Royal Assassin
Kate Parker
CHAPTER ONE
“GOOD morning, Miss Keyes. Is Miss Fenchurch here?”
The familiar baritone of the Duke of Blackford reached me from the front of my bookshop. I jerked my head up to face the door of my tiny office. The metal tool I was using to pry open a crate of two-shilling novels slipped and jabbed my hand. I sucked on my injured finger, tasting blood mixed with ink and coal dust from the boxes, and felt my cheeks burn with embarrassment.
I didn’t have a mirror, but I knew my auburn curls were springing loose from my topknot. I was filthy and in no fit state to be seen by anyone. My assistant, Emma Keyes, was seeing to customers while I dealt with the shipments of new books and illustrated weeklies, which filled the office and back hall to overflowing.
I shouldn’t have been surprised that on a day when I looked like something Dickens, the neighborhood cat, left on my doorstep, Blackford marched back into my life. Blast.
“She’s in the back, Your Grace.”
I’d given Emma orders not to let anyone see me. Traitor.
A moment later, the duke appeared in the doorway with a cheerful “Good morning, Georgia.” He strode forward around the various stacks of periodicals and books, somehow squeezing past without a single smudge clinging to his immaculate trousers. Whipping out his pristine handkerchief, he pulled my finger out of my mouth and wrapped up the injured digit. “I can’t have you getting blood poisoning. We have a problem and I want your help.”
The words “I want your help” coming from Blackford’s lips would lead me to cross deserts in August and fly to the moon in a hot air balloon. Unfortunately, with Blackford, those were real possibilities.
The hint of excitement, of danger, that the duke carried with him made him irresistible to me. The fact that he was handsome and incredibly self-assured added both to his allure and my frustration. Blackford was a duke. I was middle-class. My dreams had no hope of coming true.
He looked me over and scowled. “Have you gained weight?”
Leave it to the duke to dissipate the warmth he always created in me when he held my hand. “No. I wore my work corset and this drab gown this morning because I’m checking all these boxes of books and periodicals against the shipping papers. This is my business. I don’t trust my suppliers. And I will not be shortchanged.”
I pulled my hand away, still wrapped in his handkerchief. “I’m sorry I’m not dressed to receive Your Grace for tea.”
“I’m not here for tea, Georgia. I’m here for assistance.”
Blackford needed my help. Of course he did. There was no other reason a duke would call on a middle-class shop owner. And the only time he needed my help, and the help of the Archivist Society, was when a crime had been committed that affected the ruling class. “What is the crime?”
“Murder.” The duke stood before me amid the clutter and dust, unsullied, unwrinkled, unflappable. His posture was regal and his dark eyes mesmerizing.
His presence made my heart beat faster. At night, I often dreamed of the time when he kissed me. Well, I started it by kissing him. My face heated despite the pleasant breeze coming through the window, knowing he must not have felt the same way. His response to what I thought was a glorious moment was to disappear from my life far too often during the next year. This last trip, to the continent on his own business as well as to stop intrigue in Her Majesty’s family, had lasted nearly three months.
However, I was determined to cling to my dignity. My office may have been tiny and crowded with new stock, but it was mine. Georgia Fenchurch of Fenchurch’s Books was hostess here, not Queen Victoria. I removed two cartons from a chair and lifted it over some boxes.
Blackford snatched the chair from my grasp and set it down in the only free space on the floor. “Sit down, Georgia.” He used his no-nonsense tone that made most people jump to do his bidding.
“You sit on the chair. I’m already filthy.”
“I won’t sit while you stand.”
I appreciated that he was always a gentleman. “This stack of cartons will do nicely for my chair.” I maneuvered my feet and my skirts into a tight gap between piles of scholarly tomes and perched on a container of the newest fiction, including the latest by Mrs. Hepplewhite. A copy of her gothic novel would go home with me that night.
Once Blackford sat, pride made me lift my chin and look down my nose at him. “You have my full attention.”
Blackford picked up a copy of one of the many periodicals we stocked. I couldn’t see if this one covered the queen’s record-setting length of reign or the engagement of the son of her cousin to a fetching young Russian royal. Inexpensive illustrated editions touching on either event sold as soon as they appeared on shop shelves. I made sure they were instantly available in my shop. “Who buys this trash?” he asked.
“The people who pay my bills. And if you aren’t going to come to the point, I need to get back to work.”
He shook his head but he stayed in the chair.
I lowered my voice. “Who was the victim? Where did the crime take place? And why are you involved?”
He waved the periodical at me. “The victim was the Russian bodyguard of this Romanov fiancée of the Duke of Sussex, the queen’s cousin. The guard’s body was discovered on a train returning from Scotland. There are international implications because of where the train originated.”
“How is Her Majesty?” I asked. I knew she was at Balmoral awaiting September twenty-third, the day when she’d become our longest-serving monarch.
“Well and wanting a quick solution to this problem. Tsar Nicholas and his family are visiting her, and the Russians see anarchists under every bed.”
“It’s only been fifteen years since their tsar was assassinated. I’d be edgy, too.”
“They should be. Scotland Yard has detected anarchist activity in the East End. But there’s no reason to believe anarchists killed the guard to Princess Kira.”
“Princess? I thought she was a grand duchess.”
“The press never gets titles correct. She’s a great-granddaughter of Nicholas I but not in the direct line of inheritance. Her grandfather was a younger son. Therefore she is styled Her Highness, Princess Kira.” He brushed away the issue of her title with a small motion of one hand. I couldn’t help but stare at his still-pristine fawn leather gloves. I was dirty from the moment I walked into this paper-and-ink-filled space.
“Never mind her title.” He frowned at me. “The problem is Scotland Yard fears something worse will happen on British soil.”
“You mean to the princess? Because one of the Russian soldiers has already been killed?”
“To the princess, or to the tsar and his wife and daughter, who are in Scotland at this very moment. Scotland Yard also has to worry if a member of our royal family is an assassin’s target.”
“Why kill a guard who’d left the queen and tsar and was coming to London? That doesn’t make sense. Unless the guard had enemies here. Do we know anything about him?”
“Very little. He was an older, married man with a wife and children in St. Petersburg. He was chosen for this position because he was settled and trustworthy. They couldn’t allow anyone young and dashing to be that close to the princess. The rules of propriety, you know.”
“His poor family.” I pictured them in a hovel in the snow. Except for the royal family, I pictured everyone in Russia living in poverty in year-round snowdrifts. “What was his name?”
“I don’t know.” The duke pulled off his gloves and set them on his knee. Then he reached out and took my uninjured ink-smudged hand. “This is going to be a difficult investigation because the Russians are insular. Standoffish. They don’t want our help in finding the murderer. As far as they’re concerned, the killing was done by anarchists. They want Scotland Yard to round up all known anarchists and hang them.”
Between the thrill of Blackford’s large, warm hand touching mine and embarrassment over the filth on my skin, I barely managed to pay attention to his words. “Why?”
“Because they’re anarchists.”
I looked at him in amazement. “We don’t do things that way in England.”
“You see the problem.”
“Lack of cooperation from those who knew the victim best.” Then it hit me. “You’re involved because the Foreign Office is involved. I suppose the Russian government objects to everything Scotland Yard asks or does.”
He nodded. “We’re going to need a different approach. Do you speak Russian?”
“Are you joking?”
“How about French?”
“I speak it like an Englishwoman, but I read it very well.”
“Good. And I see a typewriter on your desk. You must know how to use it.”
“For bills and orders. Nothing more.” Where was this going, I wondered.
“We need you to go undercover again. As Princess Kira’s English secretary.”
“No.” My business hadn’t fared well during my last undercover assignment. As much as I objected that time, playing the part of Blackford’s paramour had had its benefits. I didn’t see any good coming from being away from my bookshop a second time as a secretary.
“Georgia. Relax. Emma will be here looking after the shop. You’ll spend every night at home. Your middle-class clothes and life will be part of your disguise.” He smiled at me. Wolves must smile like that at their prey.
“What about the Archivist Society’s current investigation? I’m sure you know what we’re working on, and you know we try not to split up our resources on two investigations at once.”
“You’ll have to make an exception.”
“Why? We need to find out who robbed the home of the Marquis of Shepherdston. The thieves used dynamite and blew up part of the house before they killed one of his footmen. They’re much more dangerous criminals in my view.”
“That’s only your view.”
I pulled my hand away. He was being deliberately stubborn. Since the day the duke and I had met, when he tried to stop the Archivist Society from following leads in an investigation, he’d made it his business to know every case we worked on. I felt sure he’d suggested to the marquis that he employ the Archivist Society. We were now hard at work on an investigation, parallel to Scotland Yard’s, on this burglary.
So far, neither effort had uncovered anything useful.
“Don’t deny you know the Archivist Society has been asked by the marquis to find out who blew up his bedroom and shot his footman.” I raised my eyebrows, daring the duke to lie to me.
“They blew up his safe. The bedroom was a casualty of the bomb.”
I grumbled under my breath at Blackford’s cavalier attitude. “Nevertheless,” I insisted, “they took the contents of the safe and some valuables from the rest of the house and the marquis has hired us to find the robbers and get his goods back.”
Blackford lifted one shoulder in a shrug. “He’s hired the Archivist Society. He hasn’t hired you personally.”
“I’m certain the Archivist Society has members who fit your needs better than I would.” Fenchurch’s Books was my livelihood, and I’d had to abandon it for almost two weeks during a previous investigation with the duke. Lacking a husband or family, I had to look out for myself. Such was the fate of a spinster.
“But none I want to work with. I am well-known to the Duke of Sussex. He will be around the princess a great deal, and I will accompany him as a friend and as Whitehall’s representative.”
Here it was. A chance to work closely with Blackford again. Despite my hesitation to leave my shop, I felt excitement flooding my veins.
“I’ve already planted the seed in Sussex’s mind that his fiancée needs a secretary who can also assist her in learning our language. The princess has been sheltered. She’s very shy and knows practically no English. She does, however, speak passable French.”
“About the level of mine.” I looked him in the eye. “You’ve already arranged to have me hired as this woman’s English teacher, haven’t you? You did this before you asked me or spoke to Sir Broderick about the Archivist Society taking on this case. Blackford, you have to stop forcing people to do your bidding.”
“It’s not my bidding. It’s Whitehall’s. I merely assist.”
“We’re not your slaves.”
“Serfs.”
“What?”
“Serfs. In Russia, peasants are called serfs. You’ll need to know that.”
“We’re in England. We call them slaves. I am not a peasant and the Archivist Society does not like being used this way.”
By this time, even someone as self-assured as the duke should have noticed the steam rising from my head. He held both of his hands palms out toward me. “Georgia, I apologize. From here, I’m going to see Sir Broderick and ask him to arrange a meeting of the Archivist Society for tonight. I do not mean to take you and the society for granted. But you’re amazingly talented and I enjoy working with you.”
I hoped he meant me and not the entire Archivist Society. I gave him a gracious nod and replied, “We are always eager to help Her Majesty and the government. And of course you,” I added, making my last words sound like an afterthought. My lack of assurance where the duke was concerned made me prickly.
“Good, because I can’t imagine how we’ll be able to discover why this Russian was killed unless you help.”
Acting as Princess Kira’s secretary, I’d see him almost daily. Thoughts of his constant proximity made me feel flushed. Aloud I said, “Aren’t you interested in who killed the guard?”
“No. Why is more important. If it was an anarchist, why kill only the guard? If this is part of some Russian insurrection, why kill the guard on the train and not one who was protecting the tsar in Scotland? If the murder was a personal vendetta, why wait until the guard was in England?”
“You think the princess is the target?”
“Or the princess and the Duke of Sussex. Or her hosts in London, the Duke and Duchess of Hereford.”
“Should I be armed while typing?” I couldn’t resist asking in a dry tone.
Blackford took me seriously. “No. Scotland Yard is keeping an eye on Hereford House, the duke maintains a full staff, and the princess has a chaperone who could hold off an army of anarchists with her temperament alone.”
What was I getting myself into? “Do I have to pass an interview with the chaperone or the duchess?”
“The duchess is a friend. We have this worked out between us, and the chaperone has no say.”
I stared at him as if he’d overlooked an important point. “If she can hold off an army, what is one hired secretary?”
“Officially, you work for the duchess. She is lending you to the princess.”
“How long have I been working for the duchess?”
“Not long. The princess and Sussex stopped off for a short visit on their way to London, so we’ll go this afternoon and introduce you to the duchess before the princess arrives.”
“How long do we have to set this up?”
“Two days. The princess is in a hurry to reach London.”
“Why?”
“Princess Kira is a painter. She likes to paint street scenes.”
“I’ll have to get hold of Frances Atterby and learn if she’s free to help run the bookshop again. You’re certain I won’t have to run all over England with this princess?”
“Yes.” He gave me a smile that reached his eyes and took my hand again. “I’m not an ogre, Georgia. I know how much your bookshop means to you.”
“But if the princess takes off for someone’s country estate, you’ll expect me to go along.” I knew how the duke’s mind worked.
“She doesn’t want to leave London with all these new sights to paint. And all the major art galleries are in London.”
I’d only have two days to research painting so I’d have some idea what the princess was talking about. In French. I’d have to step carefully or I could blunder badly. “Won’t she want to paint in the countryside?”
“Her family’s kept her on their country estate most of the year. She’s had little opportunity to visit St. Petersburg, and she wants to live in a big city. London will be new and exciting for her.”
But why was she staying with the Herefords? Then I remembered. “The Duchess of Hereford is a well-regarded painter, isn’t she?”
“Yes.”
“That explains why the princess is staying with her.”
“The Herefords are young enough not to bore a young lady and cosmopolitan enough not to make her think all Englishmen are provincial louts.”
“So everything is focused on this princess and no one cares about the guard who died.” I pulled my hand away and folded my arms over my stomach. I would have tapped my foot but there was no room between the boxes. I hadn’t met the princess but so far I’d not heard anything to make me like her. My sympathies lay with the guard’s family. I was seventeen when both my parents died. Their murder still haunted me.
“We care because we need to know why he died. Scotland Yard has very little evidence to link anyone to the killing.”
“So the murderer will go free.”
“Hopefully, we’ll catch him before he kills again.” Blackford looked squarely into my eyes, knowing he’d said the words that would make me go along with this investigation.
• • •
BLACKFORD RETURNED TO the bookshop in the afternoon to escort me to the home of the Duchess of Hereford. I couldn’t think of any reason why he always used the ancient carriage given to his family by the Duke of Wellington for services rendered at Waterloo unless it was to aggravate me. Sitting high off the ground, I found it difficult to climb in and out of it even with assistance. In short, I was at a disadvantage. I appeared foolish.
I glanced over at an urchin who was hawking a free broadsheet, and my aggravation grew. My shop stocked dailies and weeklies that we charged customers for. I didn’t like free competition on my doorstep.
“Miners’ strike. Show solidarity,” the boy bellowed at us, a page held high in his ink-stained fingers. I was about to shoo him away when he smacked the duke in the chest with a copy.
The duke glared as he took the paper and then gave me a hand up before climbing into the coach after me. “Well, at least the price is right,” he muttered and tossed it aside. “Solidarity, indeed.”
An image of the unsullied duke manning the barricades with the grimy miners brought a smile to my lips.
Once we were under way, he glanced across the carriage at me and said, “You cleaned up nicely.”
I was wearing my newest white shirtwaist with a blue skirt and clean white gloves. Emma had tamed my hair into a proper coiffure under a wide-brimmed straw hat. I was surprised he noticed. “Thank you.”
His grin widened. “I rather liked you covered with ink and, what was that, coal dust?”
“Yes,” I hissed out through clenched jaws. No woman wants to be reminded of her less-attractive moments.
“It gave you a certain dangerous disguise.”
Heat rose to my cheeks. “Could we focus on the case at hand, please?”
His expression was instantly serious. “Of course. The Duchess of Hereford has two charming young children, a talent for painting, and a well-run home. She’s a decent employer but she expects punctuality and meticulous work.”
“How old is she?”
“Perhaps a few years your senior.”
We stopped on Park Lane in front of a beautiful redbrick home that probably had been built during the early Georgian period. The front garden was full of roses, and well-tamed greenery bordered the walkway to the front steps.
When the duke helped me down, I slipped on the top step of the carriage and nearly knocked him over. Fortunately, the muscles I felt through his silky wool suit jacket were up to the task of saving my dignity. The shock of the near tumble didn’t speed my pulse as much as feeling the marble inside his sleeves.
I walked toward the front door with a heated face, then stopped on the path. “Blackford, you didn’t tell me the Herefords are your next-door neighbors.”
“Yes. Hereford and I have known each other since we were in our prams.”
A butler answered the footman’s knock, took Blackford’s card, and led us into an immaculate formal parlor done in blues and creams. I walked around, admiring the paintings on the walls. One in particular, showing a young boy and a younger girl, captured my attention.
“I painted that portrait of my children two years ago,” came a voice from behind me.
I turned and gave a deep curtsy. “It is beautiful, Your Grace.”
She’d already turned to Blackford, calling him Ranleigh. He in turn called her Lady Beatrice. She was tall, thin, and graceful, with a low-pitched speaking voice. The sort of woman Blackford needed to marry.
I was depressed already, and I hadn’t yet learned what my duties would be.
The duchess sat down, offered us tea, and on our refusal said, “The princess will be arriving about noon the day after tomorrow. It would be good if you were here a little early, Miss Fenchurch, to appear part of the household.”
“I’m going to use the name Georgia Peabody, if you don’t mind,” I said. “I don’t want anyone connecting my work here with Fenchurch’s Books.”
“Of course. Miss Georgia Peabody, then. Do you speak any languages?”
“I speak some French. And I read it very well.”
“And you type?”
“Yes, Your Grace.”
“And your handwriting?”
“Clear, but not flowery.” I wanted her to understand I was from the middle class. I didn’t have time to deal with anything above utilitarian.
“Excellent. Let me show you the rooms you need to be familiar with. Then we’ll sit down and put our heads together on what we know and what we need to know.”
She was businesslike. I thought I might like working with her.
“Where is Hereford?” Blackford asked.
“He took our son and left this morning for our estate. He said if we’re going to have a Russian invasion in his house, and a female Russian invasion at that, he was leaving.”
Blackford laughed. “Sounds like Hereford.”
The duchess did not look pleased. Leading us down a corridor, she opened a door on a pleasant morning room with a lovely view of the back garden. On a desk by the window was a typewriter. She showed me where I’d find ink and notepaper and typewriter supplies. “You’ll work here and have your lunch served to you in this room. There’s a cloakroom and a retiring room by the back door. This way, please.”
She showed me where I could use her modern “facilities” and hang my coat. There was a table by the coatrack already holding a small hat and a pair of darned gloves. “My daughter’s governess’s,” the duchess said by word of explanation and led us back to her beautiful parlor.
Once we were seated, she said, “You’ll be expected to be here from ten until five. Servants talk, and they’ll quickly figure out if you’re not who you say you are.” Then her attitude softened. “Try to be as indispensable to the princess as you can. I’ve been told she could be in grave danger, and I have no idea how to respond. I’ve also been told you’re very resourceful.”
“I try to be. How much do you know about the princess?”
“She’s nineteen. She has an excellent talent for painting. I’m told there was much searching in the Almanach de Gotha to find a good match for her. Someone who would tolerate her painting. Sussex adores her talent and is a good match for her, being a third-generation descendant of a ruler just as she is.”
“The Almanach de Gotha?”
“The stud book for all the royal families in Europe,” Blackford told me with a hint of a smirk.
Oh. Of course there would be one. I couldn’t imagine why the duke found it amusing, however. He was in Debrett’s, the British aristocratic equivalent. “Are they fond of each other?” I asked. “The princess and Sussex?”
The duchess looked blank. “I suppose they will be.”
I wasn’t sure if that was an encouraging statement. “What do you know about her as a person?”
She gave me a rueful smile. “Not much that would be helpful to you. The tsarina wrote the queen about the girl’s artistic talent and then the princess herself sent the queen a painting. It was—breathtaking.”
“How long will she be staying with you?”
“Until she returns to Russia. I don’t know how long she plans to remain. Sussex will be a constant visitor. He seems more smitten than she is and wants to win her over.”
“Win her over?” This sounded like a complication.
“Perhaps that’s the wrong phrase.” The duchess thought for a moment. “She’s perfectly willing to marry him, there’s no trouble there. It’s just that Sussex is in his late thirties. He should have married some time ago, but he’s so boyish, no one thought to marry him off until he inherited the title three years ago. It appeared to everyone that his sickly father would outlive us all.” She gave a small shrug. “His mother has always been the dominant one in the family and has blocked every effort to find her son a suitable wife. The dowager duchess would keep him tied to her apron strings until he was sixty if Victoria allowed it.”
If I were Princess Kira, I’d be running in the opposite direction. “She plans to stay weeks? Months? Until the wedding?”
The duchess’s eyes widened at the thought. “Oh, I hope not. The wedding is scheduled for next spring. Before the Jubilee celebration. Surely she’ll leave by November and return in April. I think the princess is due to stay at Osborne with the queen for a short time before the wedding. Windsor Castle would be more convenient, but Victoria prefers to spend the spring at Osborne.”
This investigation could keep me away from the bookshop for two months. I shot a dark look at Blackford, who’d sat silently through our conversation. The smile he returned was enigmatic.
For a moment, I was sorry he’d come back into my life.
CHAPTER TWO
THAT evening, Emma Keyes walked with me to Sir Broderick’s along the busy pavement. Families strolled together while enjoying the seasonably nice weather and speedy walkers rushed home to dinner or evening pursuits. The roads were clogged with carriages and hansom cabs, wagons having already returned to be reloaded for the next dawn.
I noticed that several male heads turned when we walked by but knew their glances weren’t for me. Emma had been an attractive child who’d blossomed into a beautiful woman. Mercifully, she’d also been born with brains and good judgment. Otherwise, no woman could have stood her.
When we arrived for the Archivist Society meeting at Sir Broderick’s large town house, Jacob, his assistant, opened the door. He took our cloaks and said, “We’re meeting in the parlor.”
Emma froze on the second step heading upstairs as I turned to face the young man at th
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