McReedy agreed before bottoming his glass and waving another barmaid over. Colin waited until heâd been served again before speaking up. âThe sergeant was just telling me he served under the captain for three years.â âThatâs right.â He heaved a sigh and stared off. âYou get to know a man in that time. He was solid. I never had any quarrel with him.â âNor, it seems, did any of his men. But you mentioned his wifeâs brother. . . .â âAch . . .â He scowled and downed another slug of ale. âThomas Mulrooney. A bastard sergeant in the Irish Guard. A real tosser.â My ears perked at his mention of the Irish Guard, reminding me of what Maw had said about a brawl between them and the officers of the Life Guard a few months past. âNever had nothinâ good ta say about the captain.â âDid they ever have an altercation?â I tried to ask blithely. The sergeantâs eyes flicked over to me with such intensity that I dropped my gaze and took a drink. âItâs the Guard, not a schoolyard,â he growled. âOf course.â Colin smiled. âAnd what about Major Hampstead? Did Captain Bellingham ever confide anything to you about the major? Something in passing perhaps?â âThe Guard doesnât natter like a bunch of old women,â he scoffed, still holding himself tight. âIf he had an issue with the major he wasnât talkinâ to me about it.â âI just wondered if you heard any rumblings. Men have been known to complain from time to time, you know.â He chuckled. Sergeant McReedy stared off a moment and then drained his glass. âIâm done,â he said as he thumped his tankard onto the table and slid from the booth. âOne more?â Colin smiled. The sergeant wouldnât meet his gaze as he shook his head and stalked off without another word, disappearing in the phalanx of people long before it would have been possible for him to reach the door. âYou certainly know how to empty a booth.â Colin eyed me. âWhat was that about?â âI heard there was some sort of brawl between some men in the Irish Guard and a few of the Life Guard officers a couple months back. Happened at a tavern on the east side named McPheeâs. When he mentioned Mrs. Bellinghamâs brother being in the Irish Guard and not liking the captainââI shruggedââI thought there might be a connection.â Colinâs brow creased. âHard to believe there wouldnât be. And Lady Stuart . . . ?â âLancaster Gate.â He beamed. âWhat would I do without you?!â He reached under the table and squeezed my hand. âLetâs go home. Iâve had quite enough of this place for one night. Iâll get Mrs. Behmoth to scrounge something up for us and we shall share what information weâve learned tonight, as Iâve not been entirely without success myself.â He prodded me before I could press for a hint, and for the first time since he had accepted the case I allowed myself to consider that maybe, just maybe, he really would be able to solve these murders in the two and a half days we had left.
CHAPTER 11 I n spite of her having been the familyâs scullery maid, it is true that Mrs. Behmoth served as the primary maternal influence for Colin after his motherâs death when he was seven. She was not Sir Athertonâs first choice for such a pivotal role in his young sonâs life, but after trying one nanny after another and seeing Colin pay them little heed, heâd finally had no choice but to resign himself to the attachment between Colin and Mrs. Behmoth. I am certain it was easier for Sir Atherton to simply give in. Some things have not changed. To this day I do not profess to fully understand the bond between Colin and Mrs. Behmoth, and yet I would have bet that Colin could never have convinced her to