Chapter 28 The Paper Trail
The Paper Trail
Amelia returned to find Malcolm looking considerably more serious than usual. He closed his office door firmly behind her.
“What I’m about to show you required calling in several favors,” he said without preamble. “And I would appreciate discretion regarding my involvement.”
“Of course,” Amelia agreed, settling into the chair he offered.
He placed several documents before her. “Regarding Penridge Works and the other factories you’ve identified—I’ve found something rather surprising.”
Amelia leaned forward, examining the papers. They appeared to be partial copies of investment agreements and banking records.
“These are confidential banking transactions from Coutts,” she said, surprised. “How did you obtain these?”
“Best not to ask,” Malcolm interrupted. “But look at the investing party.”
There, listed as the primary investor in a consortium that had recently acquired controlling interest in Penridge Works, was a name that made her breath catch: Charles Eldem Bartholomew Hereford, Marquess of Hereford.
“This can’t be right,” she whispered, scanning further down the document. But there was no mistake. Similar records showed Charles had acquired interests in three other factories Norwich had specifically mentioned—all within the past year.
“When exactly did my husband begin acquiring these factory interests?” Amelia asked, her voice tight.
Malcolm consulted his notes. “The first transaction appears to be last May.”
That would have been shortly after her editorial series on “The Children of London’s Shadows” had been published—her investigation into how poverty forced families to send even their youngest into dangerous trades.
She had written about children fainting from exhaustion beside massive looms, their small fingers valued precisely for the dangerous spaces they could reach between moving parts.
Her research had revealed there to have been only marginal improvements in working conditions at those factories.
Penridge Works installed some rudimentary guards on a few machines, but workers reported the most dangerous equipment remained unchanged.
The accident rate had decreased by perhaps five percent at most.
Amelia’s heart sank. A mere five percent in a full year of ownership.
If Charles had truly purchased these factories with reform in mind, surely he would have implemented more substantial changes.
The alternative explanation turned her blood cold—that he had recognized the profit potential in operations known for cutting costs at the workers’ expense.
“Did he purchase controlling interests in all of them?” she asked, desperately seeking some explanation that didn’t paint her husband as a hypocrite.
“Only in two cases,” Malcolm replied. “The others, he’s acquired substantial minority stakes—enough to influence boardroom decisions, though not enough to dictate policy outright.”
Conflicting explanations warred in her mind.
Had Charles invested to change these factories from within, only to find himself constrained by other shareholders?
Or had he simply seen an opportunity to expand his fortune through businesses regardless of her sentiment?
The Charles who massaged her phantom pains with such tenderness seemed incapable of such calculated exploitation, yet the man who’d concealed these investments from her certainly might be.
Wealth made people unpredictable, after all.
“Malcolm, is there anything in these documents indicating his intentions? Any notes on improvement plans or reform initiatives?”
“Nothing explicit,” he admitted. “Though there are records of some heated board meetings where safety measures were discussed. The minutes don’t attribute specific positions to individual shareholders.”
So, Charles could have been fighting for reforms behind closed doors—or blocking them. The documents offered no clarity, only the damning fact that he had kept these investments from her while professing to support her work.
As she gazed at the papers before her, Amelia felt the ground shifting beneath her feet. The carefully constructed trust she’d begun to build with her husband now seemed built on quicksand.
“Thank you, Malcolm,” she said, her voice sounding distant to her own ears. “May I take copies of these?”
His expression was sympathetic. “I’ve prepared duplicates for you. The originals must remain secure.” He hesitated. “Lady Hereford, please be careful. These matters involve powerful interests.”
She nodded, carefully placing the copies in her portfolio. “I understand. And I appreciate your discretion in this matter.”
As she left the solicitor’s office, stepping into the busy London street, Amelia felt as though she were moving through a dream. The revelation churned in her mind, disturbing and inexplicable.
Troubling still was the fact that Norwich had specifically directed her attention to these factories. Was this somehow a calculated move against Charles?
She boarded her carriage, her mind racing with questions that had no clear answers.
As the carriage rattled over the cobblestones, the documents in her portfolio seemed to burn against her side. No explanation could fully erase the fact that Charles had concealed these investments from her.
*
The private rooms at White’s club offered quiet amid London’s bustle. Hereford sat surrounded by financial records while Steven Thornton studied banking figures by the window, his expression grim.
“The ownership structure is deliberately convoluted,” Hereford muttered. “Holding companies within holding companies, all leading nowhere.”
“By design,” Patrick replied. “To shield the true owners from liability.”
The door opened, admitting Carlisle, his normally cheerful countenance replaced by urgency. “This couldn’t wait,” he said, placing a portfolio on the table. “My bank discovered something significant about Crown Street Textiles.”
He opened the portfolio, revealing documents bearing the London Bank’s seal. “The quarterly profits have been consistently directed to a single beneficiary.” His finger tapped a name that made Hereford’s blood run cold: Robert Benson Brydges, Viscount Norwich.
“You’re certain?” Steven asked.
“Entirely. Norwich has been sole owner since 1829—six years before Lady Hereford’s accident.”
Hereford began to pace, cold fury building. “He’s been manipulating her. Feeding her information about other factories to distract from his own operations.”
“There’s more,” Carlisle continued. “He personally reviews all expenses above twenty pounds. An extended medical treatment would have crossed his desk.” He extracted another document.
“And he’s been systematically acquiring competing textile operations—often after tragic accidents depress their share prices. ”
“Building an empire from others’ misfortunes,” Steven said with disgust.
“We need to speak with someone who was there,” Hereford said. “The foreman—Peter Moore.”
“Then it’s time we paid him a visit,” Steven agreed.
As they gathered the damning evidence, Hereford felt something shift inside him. The careful distance he’d maintained from his wife’s crusade had burned away, replaced by a fierce and immediate need for justice.