“Unlikely but not impossible.”
“The storm came up shortly after. Wouldn’t he have had to take shelter?”
“The others checked all the inns and taverns on their way back to London. No likely gentleman took refuge anywhere. Whoever shot Tolly was either exceedingly lucky or he covered his tracks exceptionally well.”
“Riding his own horse, he could have come from anywhere, not just London. He might have been a hired assassin.”
Devil looked at her, silently, for a full minute. “Don’t complicate things.”
“Well, it’s true. But I had meant to ask you . . .” She paused to snip a thread; in the silence that followed, Devil got her message. She’d meant to ask him before he’d acted the despot. Setting aside her shears, she continued: “Was it common knowledge that Tolly habitually took the lane through the wood?”
Devil grimaced. “Not common knowledge, but widespread enough to be easily learned.”
Honoria set another stitch. “Have your cousins discovered anything in London?”
“No. But there must be something—some clue—somewhere. Young gentlemen don’t get murdered on country lanes for no reason.” He looked out across the lawns—and saw his mother approaching. With a sigh, he uncrossed his legs and stood.
“Is this where you are hiding, Sylvester?” The Dowager came up the steps in a froth of black lace. She held up her face for a kiss.
Devil dutifully obliged. “Hardly hiding, Maman.”
“Indeed—you are a great deal too large for this place.” The Dowager prodded him. “Sit—don’t tower.”
As she promptly took his place beside Honoria, Devil was reduced to perching on a windowsill. The Dowager glanced at Honoria’s work—and pointed to one stitch. Honoria stared, then muttered unintelligibly, set down her needle, and reached for her shears.
Devil grabbed the opportunity. “I wanted to speak to you, Maman. I’ll be leaving for London tomorrow.”
“London?” The exclamation came from two throats; two heads jerked up, two pairs of eyes fixed on his face.
Devil shrugged. “Purely business.”
Honoria looked at the Dowager; the Dowager looked at her.
When she turned back to her son, the Dowager was frowning. “I have been thinking, che´ri, that I should also go up to London. Now that I have dear ’Onoria to keep me company, I think it would be quite convenable.”
Devil blinked. “You’re in mourning. Full mourning.”
“So?” The Dowager opened her eyes wide. “I’ll be in full mourning in London—so appropriate—it is always so grey there at this time of year.”
“I had thought,” Devil said, “that you would want to remain here, at least for another week or so.”
The Dowager lifted her hands, palms upward. “For what? It is a little early for the balls, I grant you, but I am not suggesting we go to London for dissipation. No. It is appropriate, I think, that I introduce ’Onoria, even though the family is in black. She is not affected; I discussed it with your aunt ’Oratia—like me, she thinks the sooner the ton meets’ Onoria, the better.”
Devil glanced, swiftly, at Honoria; the consternation in her eyes was a delight to behold. “An excellent idea, Maman.” Silver glinted in Honoria’s eyes; he hurriedly looked away.
“But you’ll have to be careful not to step on the tabbies’ tails.”
The Dowager waved dismissively. “Do not teach your mother to suck eggs. Your aunt and I will know just how to manage. Nothing too elaborate or such as will . . . how do you say it?—raise the wind?”
Devil hid his grin. “Raise a dust—the wind is money.”
The Dowager frowned. “Such strange sayings you English have.”
Devil forebore to remind her that she’d lived in England for most of her life—and that her grasp of the language always deteriorated when she was hatching some scheme. In this case, it was a scheme of which he approved.
“Everything will be tout comme il faut,” the Dowager insisted. “You need not concern yourself—I know how conservative you are growing—we will do nothing to offend your sensibilities.”
The comment left Devil speechless.
“Indeed, just this morning I was thinking that I should be in London, with your aunt Louise. I am the matriarch, no? And a matriarch’s duty is to be with her family.” The Dowager fixed her undeniably matriarchal gaze on her silent son. “Your father would have wished it so.”
That, of course, signaled the end to all argument—not that Devil intended arguing. Manufacturing an aggravated sigh, he held up his hands. “If that’s what you truly wish, Maman, I’ll give orders immediately. We can leave tomorrow at midday and be in town before nightfall.”
“Bon!” The Dowager looked at Honoria. “We had best start our packing.”
“Indeed.” Honoria put her needlework in her basket, then glanced briefly, triumphantly, at Devil.
He kept his expression impassive, standing back as she and his mother exited the summerhouse. Only when they were well ahead did he descend the steps, strolling languorously in their wake, his gaze on Honoria’s shapely curves, smug satisfaction in his eyes.
St. Ives House in Grosvenor Square was a great deal smaller than Somersham Place. It was still large enough to lose a battalion in, a fact emphasized by the odd individual of military mien who presided over it.
Honoria nodded at Sligo as she crossed the hall, and wondered at Devil Cynster’s idiosyncracies. On arriving at dusk two days before, she’d been taken aback to find the stoop-shouldered, thin, and wiry Sligo acting as majordomo. He had a careworn face, moon-shaped and mournful; his attire was severe but did not quite fit. His speech was abrupt, as if he was still on a parade ground.
Later, she’d questioned the Dowager; Sligo, it transpired, had been Devil’s batman at Waterloo. He was fanatically devoted to his erstwhile captain; on disbanding, he’d simply continued to follow him. Devil had made him his general factotum. Sligo remained at St. Ives House, acting as its caretaker when the family was not in residence. When his master was in residence, Honoria surmised, he reverted to his previous role.
Which, she suspected, meant that Sligo would bear watching. A footman opened the breakfast-parlor door.
“There you are, my dear.” The Dowager beamed gloriously from one end of the elegant table.
Honoria bobbed a curtsy, then inclined her head toward the head of the table. “Your Grace.”
The devil nodded back, his gaze roving over her. “I trust you slept well?” With a wave, he summoned Webster to hold a chair for her—the one beside his.
“Tolerably well, thank you.” Perforce ignoring the nine other empty chairs about the immaculately laid table, Honoria settled her skirts, then thanked Webster as he poured her tea. The previous day had gone in unpacking and settling in. A rain squall had cut short the afternoon; she’d got no closer to the park in the Square than the drawing-room windows.
“I have been telling Sylvester that we plan to visit the modistes this morning.” The Dowager waved a knife at her. “He tells me that these days the ton selects modistes by age.”
“Age?” Honoria frowned.
Busy with toast and marmalade, the Dowager nodded. “Apparently, it is quite convenable that I continue with my old Franchot, but for you it must be . . .” She glanced at her son. “Qu’est-ce que?”
“Celestine,” Devil supplied.
Honoria turned her frown on him.
He met her look with one of ineffable boredom. “It’s simple enough—if you want bombazine and turbans, you go to Franchot. If frills and furbelows are your fancy, then Madame Abelard’s is more likely to suit. For innocent country misses,” he paused, his gaze briefly touching Honoria’s fine lace fichu, “then I’ve heard Mademoiselle Cocotte is hard to beat. For true elegance, however, there’s only one name you need know—Celestine.”
“Indeed?” Honoria sipped her tea, then, setting down her cup, reached for the toast. “Is she on Bruton Street?”
> Devil’s brows flew. “Where else?” He looked away as Sligo approached, carrying a silver salver piled with letters. Taking them, Devil flicked through the stack. “I daresay you’ll find any number of modistes that might take your fancy if you stroll the length of Bruton Street.”
From the corner of her eye, Honoria watched him examine his mail. He employed a small army of agents; one had followed on their heels from the Place and spent all yesterday closeted with his master. Running estates as extensive as those of the dukedom of St. Ives would keep any man busy; thus far, from all she’d seen, business had prevented Devil from pursuing his investigations.
Reaching the bottom of the pile, he shuffled the letters together, then glanced at his mother. “If you’ll excuse me, Maman.” Briefly, his eyes touched Honoria’s. “Honoria Prudence.” With a graceful nod, he stood; absorbed with his letters, he left the room.
Honoria stared at his back until the door hid it from view, then took another sip of her tea.
The St. Ives town carriage had just rumbled around the corner, bearing the Dowager and Honoria to Bruton Street, when Vane Cynster strolled into Grosvenor Square. His stride long and ranging, he crossed the pavements; cane swinging, he climbed the steps to his cousin’s imposing door. He was about to beat an imperious tattoo when the door swung inward. Sligo rushed out.
“Oh! Sorry, sir.” Sligo flattened himself against the door-jamb. “Didn’t see you there, sir.”
Vane smiled. “That’s quite all right, Sligo.”
“Cap’n’s orders. An urgent dispatch.” Sligo tapped his breast—rustling parchment testified to his cause. “If you’ll excuse me, sir?”
Released by Vane’s bemused nod, Sligo hurried down the steps and ran to the corner. He flagged down a hackney and climbed aboard. Vane shook his head, then turned to the still-open door. Webster stood beside it.
“The master is in the library, sir. I believe he’s expecting you. Do you wish to be announced?”
“No need.” Surrendering his cane, hat and gloves, Vane headed for Devil’s sanctum. He opened the door, instantly coming under his cousin’s green gaze.
Devil sat in a leather chair behind a large desk, an open letter in one hand. “You’re the first.”
Vane grinned. “And you’re impatient.”
“You’re not?”
Vane raised his brows. “Until a second ago, I didn’t know you had no news.” He crossed the room and dropped into a chair facing the desk.
“I take it you have no insights to offer either?”
Vane grimaced. “In a word—no.”
Devil grimaced back; refolding his letter, he laid it aside. “I just hope the others have turned up something.”
“What’s Sligo up to?” When Devil looked up, Vane elaborated: “I bumped into him on the steps—he seemed in a tearing hurry.”
Devil waved dismissively. “A small matter of forward strategy.”
“Speaking of which, have you managed to convince your bride-to-be that investigating murder is not a suitable hobby for a gentlewoman?”
Devil smiled. “Maman can always be counted on to visit the modistes within forty-eight hours of arriving in town.”
Vane raised his brows. “So you haven’t succeeded in striking murder from Miss Anstruther-Wetherby’s agenda?”
Devil’s smile turned feral. “I’m directing my fire at a different target. Once that falls, her agenda will no longer apply.”
Vane grinned. “Poor Honoria Prudence—does she know what she’s up against?”
“She’ll learn.”
“Too late?”
“That’s the general idea.”
A brief rap on the door heralded the appearance of Richard “Scandal” Cynster; he was followed by Gabriel and Demon Harry, Vane’s brother. The comfortably spacious room was suddenly very full of very large men.
“Why the delay?” Harry asked, lowering his long frame to the chaise. “I expected to be summoned yesterday.”
“Devil had to make sure the coast was clear,” Vane replied—and earned a hard look from Devil.
“Lucifer sends his regrets,” Gabriel informed the room at large. “He’s exhausted from his efforts to discover any news of Tolly’s peccadilloes—which efforts have thus far been completely unrewarding.”
“That,” Harry returned, “I find exceedingly hard to believe.”
“Unrewarding in terms of our investigation,” Gabriel amended.
“As to that,” Harry continued, “I know exactly how he feels.”
Despite considerable effort in their delegated spheres, none had uncovered any evidence that Tolly had been in trouble. Devil put forward the idea that Tolly might not personally have been in trouble at all. “He may have unwittingly stumbled on something he wasn’t supposed to know—he might unsuspectingly have become a threat to someone.”
Gabriel was nodding. “That scenario sounds a lot more like Tolly.”
Harry snorted. “Silly beggar would have got all fired up with innocent zeal and hared off to lay the evidence at your feet.”
“Before demanding that you fix it.” Richard’s smile went slightly awry. “That plot rings truer than any other.”
His eyes on Richard’s, Devil said, “The very fact that he was coming to see me may have been what led to his death.”
Vane nodded. “That would explain why he was killed at Somersham.”
“We’ll have to recanvass all Tolly’s friends.” Under Devil’s direction, Gabriel, Harry, and Richard agreed to take on the task.
“And me?” Vane raised his brows. “What fascinating piece of detecting am I to undertake?”
“You get to wring out Old Mick.”
“Old Mick?!” Vane groaned. “The man drinks like a fish.”
“You’ve the hardest head of the lot of us, and someone’s got to speak to him. As Tolly’s man, he’s our most likely lead.”
Vane grumbled, but no one paid him any heed.
“We’ll meet here again in two days.” Devil stood; the others followed suit. Gabriel, Harry, and Richard headed for the door.
“It’s occurred to me,” Vane said, as he strolled after the others, “that the latest addition to the family might not be so amenable to bowing to your authority.”
Devil arched a brow. “She’ll learn.”
“So you keep saying.” At the door, Vane glanced back. “But you know what they say—beware of loose cannon.”
The look Devil sent him embodied arrogance supreme; Vane chuckled and left, closing the door behind him.
Wringing information from a devil was not an easy task, especially when he evinced no interest in her company. Poised at the top of the stairs, Honoria debated her next move.
She’d taken Devil’s advice and visited Celestine’s salon. Her suspicious nature had reared its head when a note, directed in bold black script and carrying a red seal, had arrived for Celestine hard on their heels. While Honoria tried on subtly understated morning gowns, fashionable carriage dresses, and delectably exquisite evening gowns, the modiste, in constant attendance from the instant she’d read the note, had made comments enough on monsieur le duc’s partialities to confirm her suspicions. But by then she’d seen too many of Celestine’s creations to contemplate cutting off her nose to spite her face.
Instead, she’d bought an entire wardrobe, all for the express purpose of setting monsieur le duc back on his heels. Celestine’s evening gowns, while unquestionably acceptable, were subtly scandalous—her height and age allowed her to wear them to advantage. Nightgowns, peignoirs, and chemises, all in silks and satins, were similarly stunning. Everything, naturally, was shockingly expensive—luckily, her pocket was more than deep enough to stand the nonsense.
She’d spent the ride back to Grosvenor Square imagining the look on Devil’s face when he saw her in a particularly provoking nightgown—only as the carriage reached St. Ives House did the anomaly in her thinking strike her. When would Devil see her in her nightgown?
Nev
er if she was wise. She’d bundled the thought from her mind.
For the past two mornings, she’d entered the breakfast-parlor wearing an encouraging smile and one of Celestine’s more fetching creations; while the devil had noticed her, other than a certain glint in his green eyes, he’d shown no inclination to commit himself beyond an absentminded nod. On both mornings, in an unflatteringly short space of time, he’d excused himself and taken refuge in his study.
She could imagine that he might be busy; she was not prepared to accept that as an excuse to ignore her, particularly as he must by now have learned something about his cousin’s death.
Drawing a determined breath, she started down the stairs. Direct action was called for—she would beard the lion in his den. Or was that the devil in his lair? Luckily, his lair was also the library. Hand on the doorknob, she paused; no sound came from within. Mentally girding her loins, she plastered a breezily unconscious smile on her face, opened the door, and walked briskly in.
Without looking up, she closed the door and turned, taking two steps before letting her gaze reach the desk. “Oh!” Lips parting, eyes widening, she halted. “I’m sorry. I didn’t realize . . .” She let her words trail away.
Her devilish host sat behind the large desk, his correspondence spread before him. By the windows, Sligo was sorting ledgers. Both men had looked up; while Sligo’s expression was arrested, Devil’s was unreadable.
With a longing glance at the bookshelves, Honoria conjured an apologetic smile. “I didn’t mean to intrude. Pray excuse me.”
Gathering her skirts, she half turned—a languid gesture halted her. “If it’s distraction you seek, then by all means, seek it here.”
Devil’s eyes met hers; while his accompanying wave indicated the volumes and tomes, Honoria was not at all certain they were the distraction to which he referred. Lifting her chin, she inclined her head graciously. “I won’t disturb you.”
She already had. Devil shifted in his chair, then rearranged his letters. From the corner of his eye, he watched Honoria scan the shelves, pausing artistically here and there to raise a hand to this book or that. He wondered who she thought she was fooling.
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