Part 16 (1/2)
”You've got some nerve, Master James,” growled Turnby the moment the door was shut.
The address left him feeling ten years old again. Turnby had chastised him in this same tone for riding his father's prized stallion without permission. Of course, the groom had later admitted pride in his horsemans.h.i.+p, for he had stayed on the animal and ultimately controlled him.
”What am I supposed to have done to you?” he demanded wearily. ”I did not replace the staff.”
”I know that.” His face hardened. ”And truth to tell, I'd not have worked for John anyway. He never understood horses and mistreated every animal he rode. But you often vowed to take me on when you set up your own stables, yet you didn't eves give me the courtesy of an explanation when you left me behind. Or were you praising my skills all those years just to make the old earl think better of you?”
”What stables?”
”No more of your games,” he pleaded wearily.
”What stables, Turnby? At least answer the question before you condemn me to h.e.l.l.”
Turnby glared, but finally settled back with a shrug. ”You moved your horses out the day your brother turned us off-right after the funeral, it was. I was still packing when you come back the next morning to take the best half of the breeding stock. Disgruntled, you was-as you know quite well. 'Twas all the earl left you, you said, slamming buckets around, breaking harness, and kicking poor Bones half to death.”
James blanched. ”You're wrong.” What had John done to Bones? If he had realized the extent of John's hatred, he would have taken the dog with him.
But Turnby ignored the interruption, railing at him as if he were still a wayward child and not a lord of the realm. ”After that, is it any wonder Bones turned on you? When he caught sight of you a few months later, I had to lock him up to keep him from attacking. Another beating would have killed him. By then, we all knew that you were working hand-in-glove with your brother. Was that your way of keeping access to the Court, or had you helped John even while pretending to care?”
”Enough!” His tone was rough, but he could stand no more. Tears stood in Turnby's eyes. ”I let you rant because I need to know how many lies John told, but now it's your turn to listen. I took my own cattle from the stables the day of my father's funeral. By sunset I'd reached Shrewsbury. Two days later, I was in London. I did not see Ridgeway again until two weeks ago. I not only left Shrops.h.i.+re, I left England.”
”Must you still lie, my lord?” asked Turnby wearily. ”Forbes has become my closest friend. Despite your orders to keep your visits secret, I heard about every despicable act you committed.”
”Forbes didn't know me,” he said gently. ”I just found out yesterday that John often impersonated me, beginning when we were boys. Playing ident.i.ty games with the staff was his way of forcing them into absolute obedience. And why should they question it? All they knew about me was that I was John's twin. It is no stretch to accept that our characters matched as well as our looks.”
Turnby frowned, but his skepticism was clear.
”d.a.m.n, I wish Bones were here,” muttered James. ”He would accept the truth.” But Bones had already been six when he'd left.
”Good idea. He remembers you, all right,” growled Turnby. ”You're about to get your comeuppance.” Opening the door, he summoned a groom. In minutes an old hound hobbled into the office.
”Bones?” said James through the tickle in his throat. A broken leg had been badly set. One eye stared blindly at nothing. ”I can't believe you're still alive, Bones,” he choked as the dog snuffled his hand.
Bones laid his head on James's knee with a contented groan and sat down.
Dear Bones. James absently scratched around the dog's ears. He had led a rough life, starting when only a pup.
He'd been walking in the woods just after his seventeenth Christmas, working off his anger over John's latest escapade, when a whimper had caught his attention. Following the sound, he'd found a pup wedged between two rocks. Someone must have mistreated the animal, for he was nothing but a bag of bones.
But he'd felt a connection the moment his eyes met those deep, brown pools. Tucking the pup into his greatcoat, he had carried it home. By the time they'd arrived, Bones had a name and a permanent attachment to his rescuer. But it was Turnby who'd raised Bones. James had returned to school two days later.
”What happened to your leg, boy?” he crooned, sinking onto the floor so he could hug the dog. Bones crowded close, collapsing half in his lap as James stroked his coa.r.s.e fur. ”And your eye. Did John do that to you? Poor Bones.”
”It really was John,” gasped Turnby, eyes focused on Bones, who was weakly licking James's other hand.
”It really was. John threw me out once the will was read. I wish Father had left me the stable-John might have accepted that. Instead, I got most of his fortune.”
”Tantrums. I shoulda known. Forgive me for doubting you, my lord.”
”Stick to James. You've always been more of an uncle than an employee.”
Turnby nodded.
”I need your help, Turnby.”
”Anything.”
”You had best hear me out before making any promises. I have to find John's killer.” Bones lifted his head at Turnby's protest, settling back when Turnby stilled. ”I cannot approve anything John did, but neither can I condone murder. A man who has resorted to extremes once might do so again, and with less cause.”
”I doubt it.”
”I know it. John made sure my name was a.s.sociated with his crimes, and he worked hard to call as much hatred onto my head as onto his. Someone made an attempt on my life last week, which can only mean that John's killer is now stalking me. I've encountered too much pa.s.sion since returning to dismiss the threat as trivial.”
Turnby's face was troubled. ”I wish I could help you, but I don't know who killed John, and I don't want to speculate. People have enough trouble.”
”Squire Church mentioned an affair gone bad as a possible motive. He thinks the story started with you.”
”No. But one of the servants at the Court might have said something. They saw plenty that they couldn't repeat on pain of a beating or worse. Or maybe the vicar knows something. He was privy to many secrets.”
”Sooner or later, I must compile a list of John's crimes-and not just as a motive for murder. I have to make up for his cruelty, Turnby.”
”You always were too soft-hearted for your own good. But there's no remedy for most of his deeds. Stick to turning around the big things, like you already started.”
”I need to do more.”
Bones sighed, burrowing into his chest.
”You can't,” insisted Turnby, lowering his voice. ”What can you do for the Prices? James ravished Meg, as you well know, for the truth of that came out the day before the funeral. Nine months later, she died birthing a stillborn son.”
James shuddered.
”Can anything bring that girl back? Will raking up the tale and reviving all that grief help her parents any? And what about Lady Northrup? I heard John spinning lies to that beau of hers. The lad was so appalled over her supposed fall from grace that he left that very day without even bidding her farewell. And those same lies made the rounds of the drawing rooms within the week. What can you do to make up for years of suspicion? 'Twas long in the past, and she's moved on to make a reasonable life for herself.”
”But- ”
Turnby refused to listen. ”Nearly everyone can cite at least one case just like those. And in every instance, talking about it would do more harm than good.”
He sighed, but he could see Turnby's point. ”You said Forbes was a friend. Would you encourage him to talk to me about recent events that might shed light on the murder? I won't stir up memories among the innocent, but I must find the killer before he dispatches me.”
He nodded.
”But don't mention the attempt on my life just yet. I'd rather not give anyone else ideas.”
”It might at that. If I'd thought of it, I might have killed John myself after what he did to Morrell.”
”I heard he made him serve as his valet-he'd sent Rigby to keep an eye on me.”
”Mistreated him badly, then refused to bury him in sacred ground despite the vicar being willing. I never believed Morrell jumped.”