The Beautiful (ARC)
Page 26
for my behavior. It won’t happen again.”
The Mother Superior nodded. “Are you in need of anything
right now? Is there anything I might provide for you?”
Celine shook her head.
A sigh fell from the Mother Superior’s lips. “Should you
change your mind at any time—now or in the future—do not
hesitate to tell me. I am here to assist you in any way.” She
paused to hold Celine’s gaze, her features somber. “The next
few days will not be easy ones, my child.”
Celine nodded, already knowing what the Mother Superior
intended to say next.
“Many of my fellow sisters have come to me in the last hour,”
the Mother Superior continued in a hushed tone. “The consen-
sus is that it might be time for us to find you alternate lodging.”
Celine kept nodding.
The Mother Superior reached out once more. This time she
took hold of Celine’s hand, her touch gentle and warm, despite
the coolness of the rain. “I’ve already begun making inquiries.
We will not throw you out on the street, and it is not necessary
for you to leave tonight. It is simply no longer safe for you to
stay here.” She paused. “Please know this is not at all what we
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want to do. But I agree it is the best course of action. For the sake of all who remain within these walls.”
“A weed left to flourish is the death of the entire garden,”
Celine said, a tinge of sadness in her voice.
With another sigh, the Mother Superior nodded. Squeezed
Celine’s hand. And let go.
Straightening her spine, Celine met the matron’s wrinkled
gaze. “Thank you for giving me a chance to begin my life in a
new world, Mère Supérieure. I . . . don’t know what would have
happened to me without it.”
“Of course, my dear. May God go with you. May you live a
life of bounty and purpose.” Then—after the slightest hesita-
tion—the Mother Superior turned toward the convent, her
cross swaying with her steps, the scent of lanolin and medicinal
ointment trailing in her wake.
Celine stood in the rain for a time, Pippa waiting nearby, qui-
etly wiping tears from her cheeks with the back of one hand. It
was an exercise in futility, for the rain soon began to fall in earnest, its fat droplets plinking onto the iron railing and splashing onto their skin.
Pippa removed the shawl from her own shoulders, draping it
over Celine’s. “You’re shaking.”
“Am I?” The throbbing in Celine’s head was worsening. She
touched her temple and found a tender spot from where she’d
struck the floor in her struggle with the killer.
“Tomorrow I’ll make inquiries with some of the other women
in my ladies’ organization,” Pippa continued. “Perhaps Phoebus’
mother will know of a place you can go.”
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“Thank you,” Celine mumbled, “but the boat to Tartarus is full.” She spoke the last under her breath. I am a Titan, after all, she sneered to herself.
“I’m sorry. I couldn’t hear you, dear.” Infinite patience rounded out Pippa’s response.
“I said thank you, but I will make the inquiries myself.” Celine
refrained from gritting her teeth, aware of how wrong it was to
turn her frustrations on her closest friend.
Pippa’s brows tufted together, betraying her own mounting ir-
ritation. “You don’t have to do everything yourself, Celine. It’s not your fault that a madman has unleashed himself on those near
you. Nor is it your fault you’ve been asked to quit the convent.”
“Even if the Mother Superior had not asked me to go, I would
have left of my own will. It isn’t safe for me to stay. It would be better . . . if I never showed my face here again.”
“I see.” Pippa blinked through the rain, her eyes shimmering
suspiciously. Then she wiped her chin on her sleeve. Renewed
her convictions with a bright smile. “Well, perhaps we can let
a room together. Wouldn’t that be lovely? I’ve always liked
Marigny.”
Her words iced the blood in Celine’s body. Made her want to
flee as fast as she could. She could not have Pippa anywhere near her. Of all people, Pippa should be as far from Celine as possible.
Being near Celine Rousseau had become a kiss of death.
And she did not know what she would do if something hap-
pened to Pippa because of her.
To their right, the doors to the convent scraped open with
yawning slowness. Two sullen officers shifted into view, bearing
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between them a bundle wrapped in linen sheets. Already the center of the sheets was stained red, the rain causing the blot
to spread, its edges lightening to a pale pink. Celine watched in silence as they moved toward an open wagon waiting along the
lane to bear the body to the station.
William’s arms hung lifeless on either side of him, one of his
hands still twisted in an unnatural position. They flopped like
dead fish as the two officers lifted his battered body into the
back of the wagon. Tears began to well in Celine’s eyes.
Just a few days ago, William had offered Arjun a cutting
from the convent’s garden, to help remind Arjun of home. He’d
shown him a kindness, expecting nothing in return.
Now he was dead, the last remembrance in his life the face of
his killer.
The tears spilled over, flowing down Celine’s cheeks in steady
streams.
Not once had she cried in earnest since that night in the ate-
lier. Her mind had forbidden her the reprieve. She hadn’t cried
when she’d realized her life in France was over. The first night
aboard the Aramis, she’d listened to the soft sniffles of countless other young women. Still she’d failed to shed a single tear.
She hadn’t cried even when Anabel had been slain.
Why did the sight of William’s broken body move her to
tears? Perhaps the dam inside her had finally burst. Or perhaps
this was one crack too many in her façade.
To thine own self, be true. The killer had quoted Shakespeare, as if he could see into Celine’s soul.
Guilt seeped into her bones, burning like acid as it traveled
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down the length of her body. Bile choked in her throat. Celine was the reason this kind man and a lovely young woman had
died.
She would not be the reason anyone else died. Ever again.
Without thought or consideration—her tears trailing down
her cheeks, joining hands with the rain—Celine began to walk.
“Celine?” Pippa called out from behind her.
Celine ignored her and quickened her pace. Turned into the
lemon grove, deliberately winding through the trees, pausing
for a time in an effort to shake Pippa from her trail. Beneath
a dripping branch, Celine took a deep breath, filling her head
with the sweet scent of citrus as it mingled with the metal
and
moss of an early spring shower. Entreated her spirit to grant her the fortitude necessary to do what must be done.
The street lay empty through the iron gate, a few short steps
and a world away.
In a moment, she would disappear and never turn back. It
didn’t matter where she went. It only mattered that she vanish
without a trace. That no one else perish because of her.
“Celine!” She heard Pippa shout from the opposite side of the
lemon grove.
Now was her best chance. Celine darted from the shade of
the tree, making her way toward the gate and the lonely free-
dom of a misty street.
A tall man stepped into her path, his tweed cap pulled low on
his brow. “Celine,” he said calmly, his eyes like chips of ice.
Celine stumbled midstep, her composure on the cusp of
splintering. “Yes, Detective Grimaldi?”
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“Where are you going?”
“I’ve been asked to leave the convent.” She attempted to skirt
him, but he shifted once more, blocking her from reaching
the gate.
Anger lined Michael’s features. “You’ve been asked to
leave . . . tonight?” His words sounded muffled to her. As if he
were speaking into a void or at the end of a long tunnel.
Desperation clutched around her heart. “Let me go, Michael.
Please.”
“Now is not the time for anyone to be walking the streets
alone, least of all you.”
It was a cool declaration. But it seared through Celine like a
brand, reminding her of the many deaths on her conscience.
One by her own hand. “Get out of my way,” she said, her voice
dangerously close to breaking.
“No.”
Celine shoved Michael with all her might. She didn’t stop to
watch him fall. She simply raced toward the gate, her feet flying above the pavestones, her heart pounding at a frantic pace. The
memory of what Bastien had said to her the night they first met
echoed through her ears. He’d likened her to a lunar goddess
who dragged darkness with her wherever she went.
She would bring no more darkness here. She’d run away once
to begin a new life. She could do it again, without a single glance over her shoulder.
A firm hand yanked Celine off course, gripping her forearm
tightly. Then it pulled her into a solid chest, clasping both her wrists behind her, forcing the air from her lungs. Michael tow-
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ered over her, caging her with his arms, effectively rendering her immobile. He was stronger than he appeared at first glance,
his body shifting beneath his wet garments like sinew.
“You little fool,” he snarled under his breath, fury sharpening
his features. “You think you’re going to run away and every-
thing will be as it once was?”
Celine glared up at him, drops of rain catching on her eye-
lashes. “Go to Hell.”
“Will you make sense in Hell? If so, then lead the way.”
“Sense?” she cried. “Tonight I was attacked by a creature that
could fly. It taunted me. Said I belonged to it. Told me death
was a garden and likened its work to the Battle of Carthage.
Two nights ago, I was stalked by something that crawled up a
wall and vanished in the wind without a trace.” Celine laughed, the sound bordering on crazed. “It knew my name. Tell me,
Michael Grimaldi, does any of this make sense?”
Michael’s nostrils flared. He released her wrists, a veil of le-
thal calm descending over his face. “Why am I only now hear-
ing of the incident from two nights ago?”
“Am I to report to you at every turn?” Celine laughed again.
Pushed him away, her hands thrown in the air. “Besides, I sound
like a lunatic. Like someone who lived in the dungeons of the
Bastille for an age, deprived of sunlight and air and all that is necessary to survive.” Her chest heaved as she took in a ragged
breath.
His expression unreadable, Michael stared down at her, his
pale gaze steady. “What happened when the creature stalked
you two days ago? How did you manage to escape?”
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“Bastien.”
“Bastien?” Michael’s eyes narrowed, a muscle jumping in his
neck. “Why was Bastien there?”
“I haven’t the faintest clue. Perhaps you should stop behaving
like a belligerent child and ask him. It’s possible he has a death wish, too.”
Michael opened his mouth to retort, but the clatter of an ar-
riving carriage stole his attention, sparing Celine from having
to partake further in the conversation.
A glossy black brougham halted just outside the iron gates
of the convent. Emblazoned on its door was the symbol of a
fleur-de-lis in the mouth of a roaring lion. For a stutter of time, Celine allowed herself to hope a broad-shouldered young man
would alight from its confines, his eyes like honed daggers
and his jaw like hewn stone. Dared to dream he would gift her
this enchanted carriage, capable of taking her to the ends of
the earth. Tell her to go anyplace she wished. Swore to follow
wherever she went, even to Hell itself.
Ridiculous. A man should not have to grant her this kind of freedom. Celine should be able to take it herself. But she’d
already tried to take it. Tried and failed numerous times, the
world reminding her at all turns that her own liberty wasn’t
hers to give, much less take. A woman absent money or pros-
pects had no place in proper society. In such a society, a wife
and daughter were legal possessions. Commodities used to
curry wealth and favor.
Perhaps it was time for Celine to reject proper society.
As if to underscore the notion, the door to the brougham
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swung open and Odette bounded down its steps, dressed in trousers and polished Hessians, a military-style jacket draped
across her shoulders. She raced toward Celine’s side, brushing
past Michael with a look that would scald the sun.
“Mon amie,” Odette said, her expression grave, her eyes red-
dened around the rims.
Celine steeled herself, her shoulders all but quaking with
gratitude. The fairy tales of her childhood had been filled with
lies. No man had come to her rescue tonight, as they always did
in the stories.
But her friends had. First Pippa with her épée. Then Odette
with her carriage.
And just a moment ago, Celine had almost turned her back
on them forever.
Before Celine could say anything, Michael glared down at
Odette, his colorless eyes seeming as if they could pierce her
through her heart. “Miss Valmont,” he said curtly. “Word cer-
tainly does travel fast . . . rousing even the most ardent of
sleepers.”
“None of your nonsense tonight.” Odette glowered back at
him, stone-faced. “My patience for mediocre young men has
fallen dangerously low.” She looked to Celine, her features soft-
ening. “I came as soon as I heard.” Her gloved hands wrapped
around Celine’s fingers. “What is it you wish to do? I’ll take you anywhere you want to go.”
Michael cleared his throat. “An unnecessary offer. I will
arrange a place for Celine at police headquarters. It’s well
insulated from potential intruders, and officers will be stationed
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nearby at all times.” He stood tall, water dribbling from the brim of his tweed cap. “I myself will patrol the streets around
it twice a night, so there is no need for this dramatic display of concern. Return to your gilded abode, Miss Valmont. Leave the
real work to those accustomed to doing it.”
Odette sniffed, the sound filled with derision. “Don’t be proud
of that rejoinder, you sanctimonious prick. It’s work enough hav-
ing to look upon you with a straight face.” Her sable eyes tapered to slits. “And perhaps we should let Celine make her own decisions, rather than informing her of yours, as you seem so keen to do.” She turned to Celine. “Mon amie, we can go wherever you
like. Charleston or Atlanta. New York, if you prefer. Perhaps even San Francisco. And if you wish to stay in New Orleans, I can have a suite ready for you at the Dumaine within the hour.”
Celine nodded, her thoughts racing in a whirl. She could go
wherever she chose. Flee this place and all its mounting terrors.
Her eyes closed as she allowed herself to dream of a new life. A
slate wiped clean once more.
Footsteps splashed through a nearby puddle, drawing to a
sudden halt, the sound of frightened gasps punching through
the darkness. Celine opened her eyes, locking on a single image.
Pippa, the color drained from her skin, her lips trembling, her
features awash in unmistakable relief. Her hem was six inches
deep in mud, and a branch had scratched the side of her left
cheek, tiny trickles of blood sliding toward her chin.
This entire time, Pippa had been searching for Celine, her
concern for her friend causing her to be heedless of all else,
even her own well-being.
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If Celine ran away now, the killer might never be caught. He would likely continue wreaking havoc on the world she’d left