An Unexpected Countess. Laurie Benson

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shifted closer to Prinny. ‘I haven’t heard this.’ He prided himself on knowing important details before they became public knowledge and shook off his annoyance.

      ‘Louis sent word to me through his ambassador. He asked for my help in locating them for France. He wants them back. There is specific mention of the Sancy, a pale yellow diamond that weighs approximately fifty-five carats. It once was part of the Mirror of Great Britain until James sold the stone to Cardinal Mazarin when he needed funds.’

      ‘What has this to do with me?’

      ‘I want you to find it.’

      ‘Why? This seems like a task for the Home Office.’

      ‘Castlereigh and I have met with them. We were reassured they would locate the jewels.’

      ‘I don’t understand. If they’re locating them, why would you want to involve me? I do not work with them.’

      ‘No, but you do work for Winter and I know how cunning you are. I want you to do this for me, without the knowledge of the Home Office.’

      Either Hart was much too tired or Prinny was talking in circles, as he was known to do. ‘So you want me to find the French crown jewels that the Home Office is already trying to locate and return them to you?’

      ‘Just the Sancy.’

      ‘Why?’

      ‘Because that diamond should be ours. Just imagine me reclaiming it. It’s too delicious a notion to pass up. I have no intention of returning it to France. I’ll never let Louis or Castlereigh know I possess it. France believes the thief, Guillot, broke apart the crown jewels. He hid clues to the Sancy’s whereabouts in a bracelet shortly after he arrived in England. This bracelet recently surfaced in Rundell & Bridge and was purchased by Everill for his wife. To find the Sancy, you need that bracelet.’

      Hart tossed the lock of hair out of his eyes, getting a better look at the man sitting across from him. There was a chance Prinny had too much to drink.

      ‘Come now, Hart. Ever since you were a small boy, you were drawn to danger. You should be begging me to do this. Your uncle often said it would be a miracle if you reached the age of twenty with your penchant for reckless acts. It is a miracle you are still alive after tumbling down that cliff not long after your mother died.’

      Hart shifted in his seat, not at all comfortable with recalling his mother or that day when he was a boy of seven—a boy who only wanted to stand in the last place his mother had stood before he lost her forever.

      ‘So you will find it for me?’ Prinny’s voice broke the painful memory and, for the first time, Hart was grateful to be interrupted by the man.

      He rubbed his eyes. ‘Do you even know what this bracelet looks like? I imagine Lady Everill has quite a few.’

      ‘As a matter of fact I do know what it looks like,’ Prinny replied rather smugly. ‘I was told there are square gold links with paintings on porcelain. The links are also engraved in a Grecian style. The thief left a note for his accomplice that the bracelet would help him locate the Sancy. Find that bracelet and you find the key to where it is. You owe me this debt.’

       Chapter Two

      Sarah stood at the closed door to the breakfast room of her home and tried to paste on a believable smile. It wasn’t working. She needed to disguise her frustration at failing to get Lady Everill’s bracelet last night before someone noticed her foul mood. There would be questions—and Sarah had no answers she cared to give.

      On the other side of the door, her parents were blissfully unaware of how perilously close they were from being thrown back into a world of grief and depression, with Sarah as their only hope. She had lived through that anguish with them once. She prayed she could find the bracelet so she would not have to do it again.

      She struggled again to smile. Closing her eyes, she recalled the thrill of racing her horse at full gallop along the shores of the Long Island Sound on her family’s estate. A small smile crossed her lips. It was the best she could do.

      When she entered the room, she was met with the faint sound of forks clinking on plates as her mother read a letter and her father browsed his newspaper while they ate breakfast. If the silence continued, she could keep trying to think of another way to secure that bracelet.

      As Sarah poured herself a cup of chocolate, her mother refolded the letter she was reading and smiled at her.

      ‘Good morning. Did you enjoy the additional time you spent with Katrina last night?’

      ‘I did. Thank you. We hadn’t spent time together like that in so long and we had so much to talk about.’

      ‘The two of you always seem to have so much to talk about,’ her mother said with a smile. ‘She looks well.’

      ‘She does, but I do think she was nervous leaving Augusta for the first time at night.’

      ‘That’s to be expected. The first time I left you after you were born, it wasn’t easy.’

      ‘She wanted to return home the minute our carriage left the drive,’ her father said, not looking up from the newspaper.

      Her mother took off her spectacles. ‘If I recall correctly, I wasn’t the only one,’ she teased before turning her attention back to Sarah. ‘I was just reading a letter from Mrs Colter. Robert will be arriving in Liverpool in a few weeks to settle some business here. She expects him to stay for three months and I was thinking it would be kind to invite him to come down to London for a visit while he is here.’

      ‘You do?’ Sarah was well aware of why her mother thought it was such a kind gesture.

      ‘Yes, we can find a room for him at the Pulteney.’

      ‘Perhaps Mr Colter does not have the funds to stay in such an establishment.’

      ‘Of course he does. That family is very comfortably settled.’

      Sarah took a sip of chocolate. It was a small reprieve.

      ‘I think it will be wonderful to see him again. He always was my favourite of her four sons.’

      ‘Which one is he?’

      ‘We haven’t been gone that long, Sarah,’ she chided. ‘You remember, he is her youngest. The one who is two years older than you. The one with the lovely manners.’

      ‘Isn’t he the one who doesn’t speak?’

      ‘He speaks. I have heard him. Why would you think he doesn’t speak?’

      ‘He doesn’t speak to me.’

      Her father put down his newspaper. ‘Perhaps the man can’t utter a single word because you never give him the opportunity.’

      ‘That’s not true. I’ve never given him the cut.’

      ‘I meant you talk too much in his presence,’ her father said with a smirk.

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