by Tamara Allen
“Morgan.”
Snapped out of my reverie, I looked into a wide-awake blue gaze that looked back as if he knew exactly what was going on in my head. But all he said was, “Good afternoon.”
“Is it?”
“Good?”
“Afternoon.”
Without a glance over his shoulder, he reached back to the bedside table and procured his watch. “Heavens, it is.” He shut the watch and regarded me ruefully. “We are becoming quite slothful in our habits. We shall have to find our own lunch.”
“Heroes never have it easy. You know, we could just sleep through till dinner. They’re sure to feed us then, right?”
“I daresay they will call on the doctor to come see if we’ve died.”
“Don’t tell me you’ve never whiled away a day in bed.” Nearly nose to nose with him, I studied unabashedly the features I’d considered good-looking from the moment we’d met, and now revised that estimation to downright handsome. Well aware of the wary light in his eyes, I grinned at him. “No one says you have to sleep, you know.”
“A pity,” he said softly. “I haven’t slept so well in years.”
“Maybe you’re a little too focused on the ghosts. Time to come down to earth. Find what you’ve been missing out on.”
“You’re quite the fellow for making assumptions about other people,” Ezra murmured, breath warm against my face.
“Yeah?” I traced his collarbone and he closed his eyes, swallowing. Just the sort of response I liked to see. My fingers found their way along the curve of his neck and I noted that his pulse was running a little fast. He circled my wrist gently with one hand.
“When you learned the truth about me from Jem, why didn’t you tell me—”
“The truth about me?” It occurred to me he might have wondered if I simply didn’t want him. And that couldn’t be further from the truth. “I like you, Ezra. I just didn’t think it was a good idea to complicate an already complicated situation. You sure didn’t need any more on your plate, with the wedding coming up—”
“The wedding.” He said it as if he’d forgotten all about it. Letting go of me, he slid out of bed and I surged out after him.
“Calm down. You didn’t do anything.” I caught a handful of his nightshirt and pulled him to sit beside me on the mattress. “It’s my fault. Reese could tell you the organ involved in my clearest thinking usually isn’t my brain.”
“What on earth are you talking about?” He paused, then, “Reese?”
I told him. Despite the mutual attraction we had going on, Ezra looked acutely sympathetic when I detailed the events just hours before he pulled me back through time. “When you return, will you press your suit?”
I smiled at the quaint phrasing. “I don’t know. We kind of drove each other crazy and not in a good way. I don’t think that one was meant to be for keeps.”
“For keeps?” Ezra looked momentarily puzzled, then figured it out on his own. “Forever, then? How charming.”
I snorted. “Yeah, well, not so much in my case. Reese doesn’t want me back.” And I wasn’t as sure I wanted him. But it was hard to be certain about anything in my life, since it wasn’t my life right now. It was still a bizarre dream I hadn’t figured out how to wake from.
After dressing, we went out to spend more hours digging through some of the mustiest stacks in all of London. And still the means to send me home remained out of reach. Coming back late, we fetched our own supper again and, sparing Henry and Derry at long last, Ezra invited me to bunk with him. There was a certain humor in his eyes, and I knew he was considering the fact that no matter whom I slept with, I always seemed to end up in his bed. I accepted the offer but behaved myself, knowing if I led him astray now, he’d have a hell of a time facing friends and family Friday night when his engagement was announced.
Up early Thursday, we hit the bookshops again, but I found myself paying less attention to titles and more to wracking my brains for forgotten details of the Ripper case. Ezra was similarly preoccupied, but it had nothing to do with the Ripper. He sat in a dim corner with a book on his lap, turning pages at the rate of one every twenty minutes, and I suspected he was rethinking his father’s best-laid plans. I had to wonder if Charlotte’s weekend was about to be ruined, thanks to me.
Friday came and we got in a few hours of book hunting before coming back to the house to dress. We found Derry sprawled on the parlor sofa, spiffed up and looking brutally uncomfortable. He tossed aside the newspaper and beseeched us to get moving, as everyone else was ready to leave and he was famished.
Ezra let me have the bathroom first and, restraining myself from remarking on the efficiency of a shared bath, I cleaned up, then let Ezra in to bathe while I shaved. Somehow I managed not to slice open an artery, despite the distracting view in the mirror. Ezra wasn’t so careful. I heard a hiss on my way out of the bathroom and, intending to rub his nose in it, turned to see him bent over the washstand with one hand in the water.
“Slashing your wrists isn’t the answer.” I helped him wash the shallow cut. “What have you got to be so nervous about, anyway? It’s a done deal. You’ve asked, she’s accepted. All that’s left is to tighten the noose and let you drop.” I pulled over the makeshift chair he’d provided for me during my shaving lesson. “Sit.”
“Oh no—”
“Even you can’t properly shave one-handed. Now sit.”
There was a certain tactile quality in shaving with a straight razor that I’d never noticed with my own electric. I eased the naked blade along, until his skin was smooth under my fingers. It was a slow process and a mesmerizing one as I occasionally met his patient blue gaze, then concentrated on another glide of the blade. Wiping away the last wisp of cream with a brush of my thumb, I inadvertently grazed his lower lip. His lashes had drifted down as he relaxed under my ministrations; but at that touch, his eyes met mine with silent trepidation—and something else. Something that made me want to do it again, deliberately, tenderly, to see that blue darken with the same hunger I was feeling. He exhaled a warm breath against my hand. “You’ve finished?”
I heard the regret in his quiet baritone. “I’ve hardly gotten started,” I murmured and leaned in to kiss him, acutely aware that he was doing the same. We might have actually achieved contact if someone with a death wish hadn’t chosen that moment to pound on the door.
“Ezra, you aren’t the only one in this house, you know.”
Ezra hastily took the razor out of my hand and told Henry he would be out in an instant. We heard Henry stomp down the hall and the humorous light in Ezra’s eyes faded to rueful frustration. “We really must dress.”
Damn Henry to hell. “Sure you don’t want to give me back the razor? It’d be a quicker death for him than the one I have in mind.”
“Please don’t kill him just yet.” Ezra smiled at me in the mirror as he took a small jar out of a cabinet. “If Charlotte casts me aside, I may need a good word from Henry to win back my position at the museum.”
I had the feeling if any casting aside was done, Charlotte would not be the one doing it. Ezra scooped an oily goop out of the jar with his fingers. I grimaced at the smell. “Please tell me that’s not aftershave.”
“Hair oil.” He offered me the jar and laughed at my expression. “You must have something similar in the twenty first century.”
“Oh, we do. It’s just not this nasty.” I caught his wrist before he could put the sludge into his hair. “You don’t need that stuff.” I finger-combed the stray damp curls off his forehead. “Stick with the look you’ve got. Trust me, it’s hot as hell.”
The smile still on his lips, he put down the jar and washed his hands. “I don’t trust your judgment particularly, considering the attire you arrived in, but I suppose it will save us time. I shall just have to hope that looking ‘hot as hell’ doesn’t mean I will be consigned to that location any time soon.”
“Don’t worry. Charlotte will love it.”
“Cha
rlotte.” Apprehension all too rapidly dissolved every spark of amusement from his face. “Yes. We really must dress.”
We did, making it downstairs before Derry gave up and raided the icebox. Cheered by the sight of us, he bellowed down the hall for his sister to come along. Someone appeared in the doorway and I had to take a second look to make sure it was Kathleen. Embroidered lace and small pearls brightened the deep blue of the gown draping her trim figure. Pearl-studded combs gleamed in the upswept cloud of hair, escaping wisps softening her angular face. Derry, Henry, and Ezra had gone quiet. I wasn’t the only one impressed.
Kathleen seemed puzzled by our reaction. “What is it? Is there something wrong?” She pressed a gloved hand to her waist and looked herself over.
Derry chuckled. “Bonny Kate,” he said with a kiss on her cheek. “Sweet Kate. The prettiest Kate in all Christendom.”
The faintest smile tugged at her lips. “Spare me your butchered Shakespeare, Derry Neilan, and let us go, or Mr. Blanchard will not forgive us.”
Hannah lingered in the doorway, all smiles, and I nudged her. “What about you, Cinderella? Not invited to this one?”
“I ain’t never,” she said, eyeing me as if she thought I was a little nuts.
I leaned over and whispered, “You’re going with us next time, kiddo, so practice your curtsey.”
I must have scared her, because she stared after me as we went out. The night had turned crisp and the streets were damp but the sky was clear and starry. We climbed into the carriage Ezra had procured, all five of us, and there was room to spare. I noted Ezra had taken a seat as far from me as he could get. Hannah wasn’t the only one I’d shaken up tonight. And it was early yet.
Chapter 12
We kept up cheerful chatter along Oxford Street for the longest distance until, at one point, everyone fell into a solemn quiet and I guessed we must be nearing our destination. I was feeling a little like Cinderella myself, as we rolled into a street crowded with cabs and other carriages and our ride slowed to a walking pace. Gardens bathed in moonlight filled the view to my left. What lay to our right I didn’t get a good look at until we’d stopped and someone stepped up to the carriage to open the door. The last one out, I smoothed down my coattails and took a look around. Mansions, as far as the eye could see, and the spires of a church hovering over it all as if God had given his stamp of approval to the conspicuous consumption.
God might have approved, but Kathleen didn’t. She looked out from under the hood of her blue cape with a pensive eye until Derry offered his arm and we started in. I knew the main thing on Derry’s mind was getting to the eats. It occupied my mind too, up the stairs and into a plush alcove that was all crimson velvet and towering plants. Other guests greeted each other in hushed voices, throwing glances my way as I walked in. A servant appeared from behind a drape and held out white-gloved hands for my coat and hat. The old feeling of walking through a vivid dream came surging back. This world… it was theirs, not mine. While I could passably behave so that they would hardly notice a difference, I would never belong. I didn’t want to think about spending the rest of my life here.
So I wouldn’t think about it, for now. There were enough distractions to keep me going. Things had livened up and they promised to get even more interesting in the next few days. Hell, the next few hours.
I wondered how Ezra was doing. Scanning the alcove for him, I realized I’d gotten separated from everyone. The only thing for it was to follow the crowd. That took me into a ballroom to rival any swanky shindig I’d ever attended back home. Lights blazed from half a dozen chandeliers and twice as many gas lamps along the two long walls. The arched ceiling had been painted light blue, with rosy cherubs flitting among drifting clouds. Every wall and door seemed gilt edged and the pale wood floor shone with all the reflected light, to dazzling effect. Sofas and chairs discreetly buffered by plants ranged around the room, out of the way of the dancing, and a number of guests had already made themselves at home. Among them, I couldn’t find a familiar face, until I bumped into Charlotte.
“Mr. Nash! I’m so glad you could come. I was worried you would have to run back to America before I got the chance to know Ezra’s dear friend better.” She leaned in with a confiding air. “Please do tell me, how does your wife bear for you to be away so long? If I were her, I could never let such a dashing gentleman wander so far from home.”
“There is no Mrs. Nash, apart from my mother—” Ah damn. It was too late to take it back. Charlotte produced a dance card and, beaming from ear to ear, effortlessly drew me to the nearest sofa and the sumptuously gowned young ladies poised on it like so many butterflies.
I was in deep shit.
The dance card was close to full by the time rescue came, in the form of Charlotte’s father, a round, shy man with snow-white hair. He spirited Charlotte off, leaving me to hunt for a hiding place. Before any of the bolder women could make a beeline for me, Ezra, Derry, and Henry appeared.
“Where the heck have you three been? Charlotte’s got me hooked up with every unmarried girl in the vicinity.”
I thrust out the card, and Derry laughed. “Can you blame the dear souls? A dashing chappie from faraway America in their midst. What could be more romantic to the feminine mind?”
Ezra, perusing the list, muttered a quiet, “Indeed.”
Henry snorted in disgust. “I suppose it is possible to dance every dance, but I don’t think I should like to try.”
Aw hell. “How many dances are there?”
“Twenty-two tonight, I believe.” Henry looked way too pleased to be delivering that information. “There’ll be no supper for at least an hour, but you may want lemonade and cake before you undertake the better portion of your list.” He’d already gotten a thick slice of cake, as had Derry.
“Perhaps we can steal a dance or two on your behalf,” Derry said. “When your lumbago begins to trouble you,” he added with an impish grin.
Ezra laughed, then quickly tried to choke it back as I glared at him. “We did try to find you,” he protested. “We’ve been all around the room and out on the terrace. We would still be searching if I hadn’t spotted you off here on your own.”
“Looking so endearingly out of your element,” Henry added with a smirk.
Startled, I caught on that he was quoting someone else—someone who’d gone deservedly red in the face. “I will have the lemonade after all, I think,” Ezra said, resolutely avoiding my gaze. He fled with what dignity he had left, while I tried to keep a smile off my face. Though I knew he was as attracted to me as I was to him, it was nice to hear it put into words. Even if he hadn’t meant for me to hear them.
“Good show, Henry,” Derry said in exasperation.
Henry put on a wounded look. “He would do well to be more careful in what he says.”
“In front of you, yes, there’s no doubt of it.”
“I’ve been a good deal more tolerant than many others would be,” Henry said with a sniff.
“Whoa, hold on a second,” I cut in. “You know?”
Derry looked after Ezra’s retreating figure and his face softened. “That he fancies the blokes? Oh, indeed.”
“Anyone else know? Kathleen?”
Derry grimaced. “Heavens, no.”
“She would turn him right out,” Henry said.
I had to think Henry was right about that. “By the way, where is Kathleen?”
Kathleen was dancing, with no less than Jem Montague. That surprised me, since my first impression of him had left me thinking he seldom roused himself to do anything that didn’t promise benefits of the most tangible kind. But there he was, whirling Kathleen around and chatting her up like they were old friends. The sight piqued Derry’s concern as well. His uncharacteristic frown said it all as he strode along, trying to keep an eye on her. “What the devil is he about?”
“Kathleen can take care of herself, Derry.”
Derry grabbed my arm. “Give her a dance, won’t you? I don’t tru
st that fellow.”
“For heaven’s sake, she’s a grown woman—” I hesitated at Derry’s beseeching glance. Overprotective brothers made me glad I was an only. “Okay, okay. Just tell me where to fit her in.” I handed him the card. “Better yet, get rid of the rest of them for me and I’ll give her as many dances as she wants.”
“Poor lad. I’ll ask Ezra to have a bit of a word with Charlotte.”