Bonfire Night

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Bonfire Night Page 7

by DEANNA RAYBOURN


  Brisbane put out his hand. “Good,” he said coolly. “And I’ll have the rubies, as well.”

  “The hell you will, boy!” his father returned. He levelled a pistol at Brisbane’s heart. “You’d kill me to keep the brat. I’d kill you to keep the gems. What do you say to that, my lad?”

  Brisbane’s voice was perfectly calm. “Julia, get behind me. My father is an erratic shot at best.”

  “Erratic shot?” Black Jack said indignantly. “I taught you, you insolent pup. But you are right that I wouldn’t be too particular which of you I hit. In fact,” he said, turning his attention to me, “it might be better to aim for her at that. You wouldn’t want to risk that, would you, boy?” he taunted.

  Brisbane gave a lazy sigh, and then, with a swiftness I had never even guessed he possessed, he lunged, reaching the pistol just as his father pulled the trigger. The sound was deafening in the small room, and before I could determine if either of them had been shot, the beams gave another creak, a long protesting groan. And then the world fell in.

  * * *

  When they dug us out of the rubble, I was in far better shape than Brisbane. A pair of ribs I had broken the previous autumn were cracked once more, but apart from a broken wrist and a multitude of scrapes and abrasions, I was in perfect health. Brisbane had sustained a shot to his leg, a flesh wound to the thigh that left him with a handsome scar and need of a walking stick for a few weeks. We recuperated at my father’s London town house, fussed over by our butler, Aquinas, who insisted he could never again take a holiday as we were not to be trusted to take care of ourselves. Portia had organised the return from the country, packing up our things at Thorncross and dressing down the villagers at length. She must have been eloquent, for they sent presents with her—half a side of beef, a barrel of good ale, another of cider, and a bushel of apples along with the remnants of the excellent wine cellar we had left behind.

  “I suppose there’s no point in going back,” I mused one afternoon as Brisbane and I lazed about, recovering from our injuries.

  “None whatsoever,” he said flatly. “I have no desire to live in a village inhabited by my father’s creatures.”

  “Poor dears,” I said. “They only did it because they were desperate for money. I daresay they would make amends very nicely. And the house really was quite lovely.” I had made enquiries and learnt that the house had only been let to Black Jack and was now for sale for an extremely modest price. But this was not the time to press. Perhaps I would surprise him with it as a Christmas present, I mused.

  But the greatest Christmas present that year—and any year—was not of my making. When they had dug out our cellars, there was no trace of Black Jack. Not so much as a scrap of fabric to show there had been another person in the cellars. Brisbane always said his father had a cat’s own luck, and this proved it. By my count, he was on his ninth life at least, and I doubted we would see him again. The only odd find in the rubble was a key belonging neither to Brisbane nor me, and marked with a notation from a London bank. November and part of December had passed away in the bosom of my family with Little Jack learning to walk and Jane the Younger telling everyone to “SHUT UP” in a voice that might have done a boatswain proud. As Christmas drew near, Brisbane and I decided to escape the house one afternoon in order to savour a little peace and quiet, and after a thoroughly satisfactory luncheon at Simpson’s, we made our way to the bank in question.

  It was a matter of moments before the clerk retrieved a small metal box from the vault and handed it over. The key fitted perfectly, and for one mad instant, I wondered if the Reinenberg rubies would be inside.

  Instead there was a tiny velvet pouch and a sheet of paper covered in a scarcely legible scrawl.

  “‘To whom it may concern,’” I read over Brisbane’s shoulder, “‘I hereby renounce all claims to my son, John Nicholas Brisbane, and give him entirely into the care of his elder brother, Nicholas Brisbane, and his wife, Lady Julia Brisbane, to raise as their own under the law.’” It was signed Captain John Erskine Brisbane and dated October 29, 1890.

  “He knew you would come,” I said, my voice breaking a little. “He knew you would see those ridiculous hauntings for what they were and come back to London. He already had this prepared and put away, giving Little Jack to us. It was all a scheme, just to see you, to give you this.”

  Brisbane shook his head. “No, I won’t believe it. He came back for the rubies.”

  I took up the velvet pouch. Tied to its silken ribbon was a tag with the same untidy penmanship. “For Julia.”

  Inside was a pair of earrings, emerald to match my ring, and nestled in delectable settings of gold filigree. “Also from the Borgias?” I asked.

  Brisbane sighed. “Most likely.”

  I slipped the pouch into my pocket and tucked the paper away carefully into my reticule as I turned to face my husband.

  “Don’t try to see good in him,” he warned. “I won’t have it. He came back for the bloody rubies. This,” he said with a gesture towards the metal box, “was just so much theatre to amuse him. You know what he’s like.”

  “Yes, and I do not believe a man who is entirely evil could have made a son as sterling as you,” I told him.

  After an unseemly interlude that would have shocked the bank clerk had he seen it, Brisbane pulled away and straightened his neckcloth, and when he did so, he was smiling.

  “What is it?” I asked.

  “I’ve only just realised. Little Jack is the first Christmas present my father has ever given me,” he said. “And he has given me the only thing of his I could possibly want.”

  I kissed him again. “Merry Christmas, Mr. Brisbane.”

  He returned the kiss with enthusiasm. “And a very happy new year to us all.”

  And it was.

  * * * * *

  A sixth-generation native Texan, New York Times bestselling author Deanna Raybourn graduated from the University of Texas at San Antonio with a double major in English and history and an emphasis on Shakespearean studies. She taught high school English for three years in San Antonio before leaving education to pursue a career as a novelist. Deanna makes her home in Virginia, where she lives with her husband and daughter and is hard at work on her next novel.

  “A sassy heroine and a masterful, secretive hero. Fans of romantic mystery could ask no more—except the promised sequel.”

  —Kirkus Reviews on Silent in the Grave

  If you loved Bonfire Night, be sure to also catch these other great stories in Deanna Raybourn’s Lady Julia Grey’s series:

  Silent in the Grave

  Silent in the Sanctuary

  Silent on the Moor

  Midsummer Night (novella)

  Dark Road to Darjeeling

  The Dark Enquiry

  Silent Night

  Twelfth Night (novella)

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  ISBN-13: 9781460338148

  Bonfire Night

  Copyright © 2014 by Deanna Raybourn

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ill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental. This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

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