But if she did know, she very well might’ve written it down.
“What do you mean?” he asked carefully.
Hyacinth picked up the diary, which had been sitting on a nearby end table. “Your grandmother,” she said, her entire bearing radiating excitement, “had a secret.” She opened the book—she’d marked a page with an elegant little bookmark—and held it out, pointing with her index finger to a sentence in the middle of the page as she said, “Diamanti. Diamanti.” She looked up, unable to contain an exhilarated grin. “Do you know what that means?”
He shook his head. “I’m afraid not.”
“Diamonds, Gareth. It means diamonds.”
He found himself looking at the page, even though he couldn’t possibly understand the words. “I beg your pardon?”
“Your grandmother had jewels, Gareth. And she never told your grandfather about them.”
His lips parted. “What are you saying?”
“Her grandmother came to visit shortly after your father was born. And she brought with her a set of jewels. Rings, I think. And a bracelet. And Isabella never told anyone.”
“What did she do with them?”
“She hid them.” Hyacinth was practically bouncing off the sofa now. “She hid them in Clair House, right here in London. She wrote that your grandfather didn’t much like London, so there would be less chance he’d discover them here.”
Finally, some of Hyacinth’s enthusiasm began to seep into him. Not much—he wasn’t going to allow himself to get too excited by what was probably going to turn out to be a wild-goose chase. But her fervor was infectious, and before he realized it, he was leaning forward, his heart beginning to beat just a little bit faster. “What are you saying?” he asked.
“I’m saying,” she said, as if she was repeating something she’d uttered five times already, in every possible permutation, “that those jewels are probably still there. Oh!” She stopped short, her eyes meeting his with an almost disconcerting suddenness. “Unless you already know about them. Does your father already have them in his possession?”
“No,” Gareth said thoughtfully. “I don’t think so. At least, not that I’ve ever been told.”
“You see? We can—”
“But I’m rarely told of anything,” he cut in. “My father has never considered me his closest confidant.”
For a moment her eyes took on a sympathetic air, but that was quickly trampled by her almost piratical zeal. “Then they’re still there,” she said excitedly. “Or at least there is a very good chance that they are. We have to go get them.”
“What—We?” Oh, no.
But Hyacinth was too lost in her own excitement to have noticed his emphasis. “Just think, Gareth,” she said, clearly now perfectly comfortable with the use of his given name, “this could be the answer to all of your financial problems.”
He drew back. “What makes you think I have financial problems?”
“Oh, please,” she scoffed. “Everyone knows you have financial problems. Or if you don’t, you will. Your father has run up debts from here to Nottinghamshire and back.” She paused, possibly for air, then said, “Clair Hall is in Nottinghamshire, isn’t it?”
“Yes, of course, but—”
“Right. Well. You’re going to inherit those debts, you know.”
“I’m aware.”
“Then what better way to ensure your solvency than to secure your grandmother’s jewels before Lord St. Clair finds them? Because we both know that he will only sell them and spend the proceeds.”
“You seem to know a great deal about my father,” Gareth said in a quiet voice.
“Nonsense,” she said briskly. “I know nothing about him except that he detests you.”
Gareth cracked a smile, which surprised him. It wasn’t a topic about which he usually possessed a great deal of humor. But then again, no one had ever dared broach it with such frankness before.
“I could not speak on your behalf,” Hyacinth continued with a shrug, “but if I detested someone, you can be sure I would go out of my way to make certain he didn’t get a treasure’s worth of jewels.”
“How positively Christian of you,” Gareth murmured.