Steam Guardians 01 - A Lady Can Never Be Too Curious

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Steam Guardians 01 - A Lady Can Never Be Too Curious Page 21

by Mary Wine


  Soon…soon, he’d be able to linger, but for tonight, he had someone to kill. He didn’t bother to chastise himself for how violent his ideas were. When it came to Janette, he wouldn’t be taking any chances.

  The man who threatened her would die.

  ***

  Janette rubbed her blurry eyes as the horizon began to lighten. Darius was nowhere in sight, and she found herself looking at the floor of the hut for any clue that he had actually been there. Her chemise was lying on the floor, sending color into her cheeks as she recalled exactly how it had ended up there. She was as bare as Eve beneath a thin blanket. She sat up and glared at her corset, trying to decide how to get back into it.

  Maybe Decima would be up.

  With a little hop, she landed on her feet and pulled her chemise off the floor and put it on. She reached for the corset off the shelf where it was resting. Beneath it, there was a folded envelope. A tingle of apprehension went down her spine.

  Who could have left it?

  Maybe Darius had left it.

  Happiness filled her, and she picked it up, intent on reading the contents. But her eyes widened with horror when a small cameo slid out of it, the delicate carved-bone flowers on its front ingrained in her memory from the countless times she’d seen the cameo around Sophia’s neck.

  My dear Miss Aston,

  You shall discover a way to conceal yourself in the king’s party to escape the compound and join my compatriots on the north shore, or your friend shall pay the price of your disobedience. Alert your lover, and I shall be happy to put a bullet between her eyes before you can reach us, which will leave me ample opportunity to put a second one into the head of your Guardian Lawley. You will bring this note with you to prove you did not leave it for your lover to use as evidence to clear your name. Once you join me, the Illuminists will never welcome you back. In case you are considering acting the loyal Illuminist, be sure my next correspondence will include one of Miss Stevenson’s toes.

  Doctor Nerval

  Her belly cramped, as though she might retch, but all the muscles did was fill her with pain. Nausea threatened to strangle her as she lifted the cameo, desperately searching for any hint of deception.

  But she recognized it. Even the delicate silk ribbon that was creased where it had been tied behind her friend’s neck.

  Sophia.

  Janette dropped the corset back on the shelf and reached for her skirt. She shrugged into the jacket and braided her hair before looking for her shoes. Memories of the clinic flooded her mind, tormenting her with details of just how horrible her friend’s plight might be.

  Well, she was going to do something about it. The doctor would keep his word that he would kill Sophia; she had no doubt about it. So she’d have to go alone and discover a way to free her friend. She refused to allow herself to worry. No, she was no longer the child her father had left at the clinic.

  She was an Illuminist Pure Spirit.

  Which meant she had to think when the times were hard. She looked around the hut and pulled loose one of the palms that made up the walls. It was dry and brittle. She stripped the dead leaves from it and knelt. Using the end of it, she began to write in the moist dirt floor, copying the letter word for word. Once she was finished, she left the cameo near the last line.

  She stood and left before the dawn was finished breaking.

  ***

  “You’re going to want to get up and close those trousers.” Darius Lawley spoke from the doorway of the hut Marshal Agapitos had spent the night in. Darius enjoyed the moment of shock on the Marshal’s face, savoring it as the man’s face contorted with rage.

  Agapitos closed his pants and snapped at Darius as the woman he’d been enjoying rolled over the back of the hammock. She landed neatly on her feet and hurried out of the hut.

  “You have no right to invade my privacy.”

  “I have every right,” Darius muttered softly. The early-dawn light illuminated the satisfaction on his face.

  “How dare you?”

  “You are to be questioned before the council of the local Solitary Chamber, Marshal Agapitos,” Darius informed him. “Don’t bother looking for your squad of Guardians. I have spoken with their superiors. They no longer answer to your authority, but to mine.”

  “You had no right!” Agapitos insisted. “I am a Marshal.”

  “You are a suspected Helikeian,” Darius returned. “One I am going to personally enjoy bringing to justice. You and your father were the only members who testified against Janette’s mother. Because you share blood, that is not sufficient. You tainted an innocent woman to separate her from the Order.”

  Past Darius, he saw Guardians moving outside, searching the compound for Janette and Grainger. But for the moment, none of them were watching what was happening inside the hut.

  It was his chance, his opportunity to continue on for his cause. Agapitos reached into his pants pocket. Inside was a piece of level-four crystal carefully enclosed in a leather case. He always kept it near, just in case he needed it. Pushing the top leather piece aside, he held on to the other half of the case, which was a sewn into a handle. Pulling the crystal from his pocket, he shoved it toward Darius, aiming for the spot on his chest over his heart. It would burn through the chest wall and into the vital organ in mere seconds.

  “You are going to die,” he hissed as the crystal made contact, and he struggled to maintain his grip on it. “The Pure Spirit is ours, as surely as if we had bred her.”

  Pain burned into him. Darius reacted in a split second, striking out at the most vulnerable spot within reach. His training took control as he felt his chest burning. Agapitos staggered back, a solid blow delivered to his neck, crushing the bones. He gurgled and struggled to suck breath into his chest. Bright red blood coated his lips instead. His eyes bulged before he fell to his knees, the crystal rolling across the floor of the hut.

  Darius rubbed the front of his chest, staring at the scorched fabric of his vest and shirt. Blisters decorated his skin, but he welcomed the pain. It meant he was alive.

  “The bastard could have easily killed you,” Lykos muttered as he arrived. Bending down, he picked up the crystal, careful to only touch the handle.

  “Or any of us, for that matter.”

  Lykos studied the damage to his chest for a moment, but that wasn’t what kept his lips in a hard line. His comrade was deadly serious when he made eye contact with him.

  “Janette is missing. Along with Grainger and Bion.”

  Darius felt something move through him that he hadn’t admitted to feeling in a very long time. It tore through his discipline and settled in his gut, where it felt like it was festering. He stared at Lykos, waiting for his friend to smirk and make some sarcastic comment to prove it was only a jest.

  Instead, his fellow Guardian looked grim, his eyes full of another emotion Darius wasn’t accustomed to either of them being caught in the hold of. His friend’s eyes were full of defeat, but Darius admitted that what he was suffering…was fear.

  Seven

  Escaping the compound was easier than she’d expected. The king was embarking on a morning expedition, just as the note had said. His servants were focused on making sure they had everything necessary for his comfort. There were carriages and wagons loaded with chairs and tents and every other manner of comfort.

  Janette simply took a place inside one of the carriages with the other women of his household. Everyone was busy, their minds on their tasks. The women noted and smiled at her, clearly thinking she had been invited. Still, she fought to keep her expression serene when they began to approach the gates. The guards stood at attention as their monarch rode past and never gave the women riding after him even a glance. Some of the women in the other carriages were young, and she realized they were consorts.

  The morning light w
as waking the inhabitants of the jungle. Colorful birds flew from tree to tree while butterflies fluttered about. The carriage rolled toward the coast, leaving the trees behind. The sound of the breaking surf filled the air as the carriage came to a stop. Everyone alighted and began to unload the wagons.

  Janette pulled a parasol from the carriage and used it to hide her face as she wandered away from the king’s party. For a moment, she faltered, wondering if she hadn’t made a grave error in not waiting for Darius. But Sophia wasn’t a member of the Order; it was very possible he’d consider the matter out of their control.

  She couldn’t take the risk, not with Sophia’s life. Janette forced herself to walk farther away from the king’s group, walking up to the tree line while searching for any sign of Dr. Nerval.

  “So, you have loyalty in you.” Grainger appeared from behind a palm tree. His vest was open, and his shirt too. “I wonder what your fiancé will make of your departure.”

  His lack of dress should have offended her, but she realized she was far more Illuminist than the daughter her father had raised to be a lady of high society because she didn’t care a bit; her mind was focused completely on her goal.

  “Where is Sophia?” she demanded.

  Grainger offered her a smug look. “Are you sure we have more than her cameo?”

  “She never lets it out of her sight. It was the last gift her mother gave her.”

  “How sweet,” Grainger groused. “Disgustingly so. But beneficial to our cause. Where is the note?”

  Janette pulled the letter from her jacket and tossed it toward him. The paper was too light and fluttered to the ground, but at least she had the satisfaction of watching Grainger stoop down to retrieve it.

  “Did she follow instructions?” a new voice interrupted. One of the orderlies from the clinic appeared, shooting a hard look toward Grainger.

  Grainger opened the letter and scanned it quickly. “Get the other one out of the pit. The doctor isn’t a patient man.”

  Janette glared at the orderly, recalling the bite of the leather straps very well.

  “I’m minding my post,” Grainger insisted. He moved his hand, and for the first time, Janette saw the small pistol he held. He had the weapon’s muzzle aimed at the ground. The orderly kicked at some dead palm leaves piled on the ground nearby to reveal an opening.

  “I was going to enjoy shooting her, you know. She doesn’t know when she’s been beaten. Damned bloody nuisance.”

  The orderly reached down and hefted a bundle out of the pit the leaves had concealed. A burlap sack was over the person’s head, and when he pulled it free, Sophia’s blond hair shimmered in the tropical sun. She was gagged with a thick strip of fabric torn from the hem of her dress, and another length was wrapped around her wrists and body to keep her arms from being of any use. But her eyes were full of fury, proving the orderly true. Sophia hadn’t been reduced to sniveling by her circumstances.

  “You animals,” Janette hissed.

  The orderly was unmoved by her words; in fact, he appeared somewhat pleased.

  “She’s alive. That’s what you’ve earned by coming.” Grainger scanned the beach behind her for a long moment. “But she’s only going to stay that way if you came alone.” He pressed the gun into Sophia’s side while glaring at Janette. “If your lover shows his face, I’m going to kill her.”

  The orderly grabbed Sophia’s upper arm in his large hand. “Then let’s go before someone comes over here to see what we’re doing. We don’t blend in here.”

  “No, we don’t,” Grainger agreed. He shoved the pistol into his pocket. “I can pull it out again in a moment, so do remember your dear friend is relying upon you to safeguard her.”

  Sophia tried to say something to him, her cheeks turning red as her eyes narrowed. Grainger tipped his head back and laughed. Janette yanked the gag off her friend but froze when Grainger leveled the pistol at Sophia.

  “Not a single sound out of either of you.” He gestured with the weapon toward the thick foliage of the tropical jungle. “And get moving before I have to start shooting you in nonlethal places just to keep you motivated. I promise the wounds will be excruciatingly painful and, in this climate, likely to fester.”

  “We’re going,” Janette retorted without a trace of respect in her tone. She grabbed Sophia and heard her friend cry out softly.

  But the pistol was too real for either of them to ignore.

  “What are we going to do?” Sophia whispered.

  “I don’t know, just keep moving. We’ll figure something out.”

  Janette just hoped she could make good on her promise.

  ***

  Darius should have been furious. His honor should have been offended, but instead, he was stone-cold terrified. There wasn’t a man alive he feared, but seeing the evidence that Dr. Nerval was indeed a Helikeian turned his blood cold.

  “Someone needs to contact London. Once they have Janette, I expect they will dispatch someone to kill her parents to cover their tracks,” Lykos said. “That way they can kill us and cover their tracks completely.”

  Guardian Cyrus Vettel of the local Solitary Chamber nodded. “My people will attend to it. As for the Pure Spirit, how many Guardians do you need to neutralize her?”

  “She left in a blind panic. Neutralization isn’t a foregone conclusion,” Darius insisted.

  Cyrus wasn’t convinced; he knelt next to the writing Janette had left behind.

  “This female was raised among high society.” Darius pointed at the corset still lying where Janette had abandoned it. “She wouldn’t have ventured past the door without that unless she was panicked.”

  “Yet she did refuse to take the Oath of Allegiance,” Cyrus countered. “Since she is your fiancée, you should remove yourself from the search.”

  “She isn’t my fiancée. It was a ruse to prevent Marshal Agapitos from using his authority to remove her from my sight,” Darius answered smoothly. He ground his teeth together, frustrated by how much he had to struggle to maintain his composure. Janette undermined his discipline like nothing else.

  “A clever one, too,” Lykos added. “As a Marshal, Agapitos had the superior rank, and he knew it.”

  “I will need a full squad to rescue them both.”

  Darius didn’t wait to see if Cyrus would agree with him. He left the hut and hurried to change out of his ruined clothing. Instead of the formal clothing they’d endured to impress the king, he put on canvas pants and a thin lawn shirt to protect his skin from the sun. The vest he reached for was all leather, with pockets and rings sewn into it for the tools he’d need to traverse the jungle. His hat was leather, and he made sure his goggles were in his pocket. The Crystal Fields were a dangerous place. He pulled on knee-high leather boots, but even the stiff leather might not be enough to keep him from being burned. He took his gauntlets with him as he ducked beneath the low doorway of the hut. Lykos was just finishing dressing himself but frowned when Decima appeared in a pair of pants.

  “I am going,” she announced in a clear and steady tone. She’d changed into serviceable clothing too.

  “Women do not belong on a hunt.” The king’s herald appeared, the Hawaiian guards flanking him. “And you will not be departing from this compound with all your members. My king would be displeased to hear your Pure Spirit is hunting crystals while he has nothing here to ensure you will trade honestly with him.”

  “Leave the woman.”

  “They will not,” Decima argued. “I belong on this mission as much as any other.”

  “Yet you are more valuable because you can produce new life,” the herald informed her. “My king would insist on keeping you because your warriors will return for you.”

  “Bloody primitive attitude,” Decima muttered softly enough to keep her words from drifting to the herald. “T
alk him out of it, Darius.”

  The herald held his hand up, keeping the carriages waiting at the gate. These were Illuminist ones, with no horses pulling them.

  “We don’t have time to argue, Decima,” Darius offered softly.

  Her eyes narrowed. “Since you resigned your post, you do not have the authority to give me orders.”

  “But I do,” Lykos answered. “I am your superior, and you will do your part by remaining inside this compound to satisfy the king. Is that understood?”

  Decima was furious. Her green eyes flashed at Lykos. “It’s understood.”

  A hiss and gurgle announced the arrival of the carriages. Darius turned to move toward the gate with the other Guardians falling into step behind him. The guards allowed them through, while he felt Decima’s gaze like a dagger on his back.

  “It will be better this way,” Lykos muttered as the carriage pulled away.

  “For everyone except you,” Darius answered.

  Lykos shook his head. “I disagree, my friend. I have no wish to be wearing the shoes you discover yourself in today.” His expression tightened. “Our lives are too dangerous for anything beyond duty.”

  Darius understood his friend too well. The truth was coiled in his gut, slowly burning while he tried to think of a way to rescue Janette. He should have been considering the most effective method of neutralizing the threat she posed to the Order. His emotions shouldn’t have been involved beyond a slight recognition of the fact that it was a waste of a valuable resource.

  Instead, he heard her laugh and recalled the way she’d demanded to ride him. He saw her blond hair lying over her shoulders like a shimmering curtain and remembered the silky texture perfectly. Her scent, the sound of her breathing when she was asleep in his embrace, and a hundred other details flooded his mind.

  But what bothered him the most was the fear that he’d be unable to reclaim her. For years, he’d thought his heart was dead. It wasn’t. He’d just walled it up behind his duty, and it had taken a slip of a society girl with a spirit that wouldn’t be intimidated by his strong exterior to break through the barrier.

 

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