rivalsâ pipes, making the supply unpredictable.
âConvene the vestry,â he said. âIâve a proposal to put to the citizens.â
CHAPTER TWO
Dear Mr. OâShea,
Your niece, Lilah, Lady Palmer, speaks highly of your business acumen. I have a proposition that promises to profit you handsomely. Please reply at your earliest convenience.
Catherine Everleigh
Dear Mr. OâShea,
Your silence suggests that I have given offense. I would ask you to forgive my forwardness in writing to you without the precedent of a formal introduction. I had anticipated that we would be introduced at the wedding of your niece to Lord Palmer. In consequence of their elopement, I chose instead to contact you directly. It was an egregious breach of etiquette, for which I apologize.
If you would be so good as to overlook my presumption, I would very much appreciate the chance to speak with you about a prospect that promises a handsome revenue for you. Your niece has assured me that you are a man of fine business sense. I trust you will not dismiss an opportunity for profit without first learning of the details.
Kind regards,
Miss Catherine Everleigh
Proprietor, Everleighâs Auction House
Dear Mr. OâShea,
As a particular friend to your niece, Viscountess Palmer (whom you once knew as Lily Monroe, but who served in my employ at Everleighâs under the name of âLilah Marshall,â for reasons that you will not require a reminder of), I feel compelled to inquire after your well-being.
As you may know, your niece has embarked on an extended honeymoon abroad. It occurs to me that in her absence, you might have entered into some difficulty that prevents you from replying to the letters of her friends.
For her sake, my concern mounts each day that I do not receive a reply from you. Accordingly, I intend to request the police to pay a call tomorrow on the public house in Whitechapel known as Neddieâs, where I am given to understand that your whereabouts would be known, were you still at liberty to discourse uponthem. I hope very much to receive happy news from the constables of your continued health.
Again, allow me to extend my apologies for the forwardness of presuming on an acquaintance that has yet to be formally effected.
Sincerely,
Miss Catherine Everleigh
Catherine,
Not yet acquainted, are we? I can only assume youâve taken a hard knock to your head since we last saw each other. Then again, you and Lily were feeling a mite frisky after escaping that Russian bastard, and you were chugging Neddieâs ale by the bucketfulâso perhaps the night has slipped right out of your mind.
But sure and certain you seemed sober enough the time before that, when I knocked Lord Palmer on his well-bred arse at one of your auction-house parties. Perhaps it was my mistake to kiss your hand that night, rather than your sweet little mouthâotherwise you would have remembered our meeting. Alas, thatâs the gentlemanâs way, moreâs the pity.
At any rate, I consider us thoroughly introduced. Put your mind at ease on that front.
As for visiting, donât bother to come if itâs business that brings you. Iâve no interest in the sale of glittery bits, or whatever it is that lures toffs to your auction house like chickens toward a cliff.
However, if youâd like another taste of Whitechapelâs finest, the door always stands open to a friend ofLilyâsâparticularly a girl who can put away so many pints. This time, however, I wonât be picking up the bill for youâfor I am, as you point out, a man of business, and I know a potential profit when I see one. (Six pints, did you drink? So Neddie swears. But thereâs a legend gathering steam that says you drank ten.)
Cheers,
Nick OâShea
P.S. I reckon youâll have remarked that this note was delivered by the superintendent of the Whitechapel Division of the Metropolitan Police. Kind of him,
Carmen Caine, Madison Adler