Detective Stark stands and paces in front of Ms. Sharpe’s desk. “You must have hated him,” she says suddenly.
“I still do,” Ms. Sharpe replies.
“Then let me ask you this: did you hate him enough to poison him?”
Ms. Sharpe laughs, but the sound is tinny and thin. “Have you understood nothing? He’s no good to me dead.”
“He was no good to you alive either,” I point out.
Stark looks at me, her lips curled into an almost imperceptible smile.
“Make no mistake,” Ms. Sharpe says. “I hated that man with every fiber of my being. He took advantage of my mother in more ways than I can enumerate. He used her talents and palmed them off as his own. He did other things, too.”
“Such as?” Stark asks.
“He made unwelcome advances on your mother and then used them against her,” I say.
Ms. Sharpe eyes me with curiosity. “How did you know that?”
“My gran,” I reply. “He did the same to her. I suspect he did the same to all his female staff, which is why Mrs. Grimthorpe insisted on having only the two women she trusted in the mansion. And by ‘trusted,’ I mean women forced to keep quiet.”
“Your gran and my mother.”
“Yes,” I reply.
“He got away with this his whole life, even tried it on me,” says Ms. Sharpe. “I swear, I pushed him off me so hard, I nearly killed him. Such a powerful man and yet so weak. I always figured he’d drop dead one day since he was so susceptible. I looked forward to it. I just didn’t expect him to die on exactly the wrong day.”
One word she said stands out from all the others. “Susceptible,” I say. “Why would you describe Mr. Grimthorpe as susceptible?”
“His years of alcoholism had taken their toll. His liver and kidneys were shot,” Ms. Sharpe says.
“Which explains why the antifreeze took him out so quickly,” Detective Stark adds. “His organs couldn’t process the poison at all.”
Just then, Jenkins appears at the door of the office. He’s carrying a tray with a steaming teapot and porcelain cups I recognize from long ago. “Ma’am?” he says. “Your tea. I wasn’t sure if you wanted cups for your guests.”
“My guests? You’re the one who let them in, Jenkins,” Ms. Sharpe replies.
“I didn’t have much choice,” he says, though he doesn’t meet her eye. “Anyhow, I brought tea for three.” He places the tray on her desk, smiles at me, then slinks out the door.
Ms. Sharpe picks up the pot and pours tea into three cups. “You might as well help yourselves,” she says to Detective Stark and me.
“I take mine black,” Stark says as she grabs a dainty cup that looks too small for her large hands. “Not much of a tea drinker. Coffee’s more my thing.”
I take a lovely porcelain cup from the tray. I add a drop of milk and stir with a tarnished silver spoon. It makes a delightful tinkling sound as it grazes the fine porcelain, the same sound that a Regency Grand spoon makes against a Regency Grand teacup.
I gasp out loud and nearly spill hot tea all over myself. I set the teacup and spoon down on Ms. Sharpe’s desk.
My heart starts to pound. It comes together in an instant, every missing piece, every variable falling into perfect place. My breath catches in my throat. The room tilts to one side. “Detective Stark,” I say. “We have to get to the hotel. Right away!”
“But we just got here,” she replies. “And I have more questions for Ms. Sharpe.”
“No! No more questions. We don’t have time. We must go to the Regency Grand, posthaste!”
“What the hell is going on, Molly? Why are you suddenly in such a rush?” Stark asks.
“Because it’s not Ms. Sharpe who killed Mr. Grimthorpe. And I know exactly who did.”
Long ago, my gran told me a true story about a maid, a rat, and a spoon. I have never forgotten it. A maid working in a castle is blamed for the disappearance of a silver spoon, but years later, that spoon is found in a nest beside the petrified skeleton of the rat who stole it.