“I don’t think—,” the Prime Minister, Liverpool, made the mistake of trying to say.
“That’s because you don’t know! You don’t know the blackness, the evil that lives inside that vile hell’s spawn of a woman. She actually makes effigies of me from wax and sticks pins in them, like some African voodoo queen! I tell you, she will stop at nothing to destroy me unless I destroy her first.”
This last statement was accompanied by a fierce stare directed at Jarvis, who, unlike the other men present, knew precisely which plans most concerned His Highness.
Jarvis gave a low bow. “We have the matter quite in hand, Your Highness. You may rest easy.”
“Well. At least someone understands the gravity of the situation,” grumbled the Prince. “Perhaps you should bleed me, Heberden,” he added in a plaintive voice to the nearest physician. “I feel my pulse beginning to race.”
“Of course, Your Highness.”
As the other men bowed and backed from the royal presence, Liverpool shot Jarvis a quick questioning glance and said quietly, “What the devil was that about?”
“The Princess,” said Jarvis.
“The Big P or the Little P?” asked the Prime Minister—the “Big P” or “Big Princess” being the Regent’s wife, Princess Caroline, while the “Little Princess” was their daughter, Princess Charlotte.
“Both,” said Jarvis with a smile. “And neither.”
Chapter 7
Rothschild.
Sebastian found himself turning the financier’s name over and over in his head as he slipped and slid his way across the freezing, paralyzed, miserable city toward the financial district in the east.
The son of a minor Frankfurt coin dealer turned banker, Nathan Rothschild had appeared in England just fifteen years before. At first he’d focused on skimming money off the Manchester cotton industry before transferring his unsavory but undeniably brilliant talents to the London Exchange. In just a few short years, he’d managed to become one of the richest men in the Kingdom.
But Rothschild was more than a financier. Like many of his peers, he was also heavily involved in smuggling, and at that level smuggling was a deadly serious, highly lucrative, and dangerous business. If, in the process of teaching Anna Rothschild, Jane Ambrose had accidently overheard or stumbled upon something she wasn’t supposed to know, Sebastian could see Nathan Rothschild or his associates ordering her killed.
Quietly and efficiently.
At this time of day, Nathan Rothschild could typically be found at his station in the Royal Exchange, a massive arcaded baroque building that stretched between Cornhill and Threadneedle Streets and that was the center for buying and selling and all kinds of deal making. Given the weather, Sebastian wouldn’t have been surprised to discover Rothschild’s position deserted. But the financier was there, leaning against his customary pillar on the eastern edge of the Exchange’s vast open quadrangle.
A short, stout figure in a threadbare greatcoat and a misshapen top hat he wore pulled low over his eyes, he looked more like a tradesman or shopkeeper down on his luck than the kind of man who lent money to kings and emperors. He stood with his hands in his pockets, his expression, as always, utterly unreadable. When Sebastian paused before him, Rothschild simply blinked and turned his head to stare at the arched arcade on the far side of the snow-choked courtyard.
“Go avay. You’re bad for business.”
Sebastian cast a significant glance around the largely deserted quadrangle. “The Exchange isn’t exactly booming at the moment.”
“All the more reason for you to go avay.”
Sebastian tipped his head to one side. “Now, why wouldn’t you want to talk to me? I wonder.”
Rothschild fixed Sebastian with a deadened glare. An extraordinarily ugly man with a big round head, protruding cleft chin, and large pouty lips, he looked to be somewhere in his late forties or fifties, his red hair already fading to gray. But he was actually still in his thirties, just five years older than Sebastian himself. “You think I don’t know vhy you’re here?”
“Actually, I assumed you did.” The Rothschild family—which included four other brothers strategically placed in Paris, Vienna, Frankfurt, and Naples—was said to maintain a magnificent network of spies, informants, and courtiers that rivaled or perhaps even exceeded those of powerful statesmen such as Jarvis and Metternich.
The financier’s eyes narrowed with what looked like a cross between annoyance and animosity. “Jane Ambrose ceased to function as my daughter’s piano instructor veeks ago.”
“So I’d heard. Why? I wonder.”
“Do you, indeed? And yet I fail to see vhy I should answer any of your decidedly impertinent questions.”
Sebastian let his lips pull back into a smile. “I suppose the answer to that depends on how much you have to hide.”
A sound that might have been a laugh shook the other man’s fleshy frame. “Are you threatening me? Seriously? Me?”
“You find that statement threatening?”
“Have you by chance spoken vith your father-in-law?”
“No. Should I have? I’d no notion Jarvis was involved in the selection and dismissal of your children’s music instructors.”
Rothschild shrugged. “Jane Ambrose vas no doubt an excellent pianist. Unfortunately, my daughter Anna has exhibited little interest in music and even less talent. Hence the decision to terminate our arrangement.”
“Really? That’s odd.”
“Odd? Vhat? Vhy?”
“Because I’m told Jane Ambrose considered your daughter an unusually promising student.”
“I can only assume that if Mrs. Ambrose did indeed say such a thing, then she vas simply being kind. Despite a father’s inevitable prejudices, even I must admit that my little Anna vas a vaste of Mrs. Ambrose’s time.”
“And your money.”
“Obviously.”
“What I find particularly curious is that Jane Ambrose wasn’t simply upset by her dismissal. She was frightened.”
Rothschild pursed his full lips. “She told someone that? Who?”
“Not in so many words. I gather it was more along the lines of an observation.”
“Mmm. Curious. I know of no reason vhy the woman should have been frightened. But I assure you, it had nothing to do vith me.”
“When was her last lesson with your daughter?”
Rothschild shrugged. “Surely you don’t expect me to recall precisely? It was near the end of the Great Fog. The lessons were always