“Oh, I understand you,” assured Lady Spencer, drawing her into the oak-paneled corridor. “La, what a pity my cook has disappeared. You would have adored his creative confections.”
“Disappeared?” she repeated, taking care to sound surprised. “You mean he left your employment?”
“Yes.” Lady Spencer seemed to regret her slip of the tongue. “Rather abruptly. It was quite inconvenient. . . .” She looked away and pressed her palm to a door, which swung noiselessly open. “Come, I think you will find this interesting.”
Two ornate brass candelabras, their curling arms made up of arched cobras, flanked an arrangement of display shelves and art on the far wall. “Lord Concord is a connoisseur of Indian art,” said Lady Spencer, leading the way across the room. Flickers of light danced over carved wood and polished metal set with semiprecious stones. “His connections in the country allow him access to some very special treasures.”
“Impressive,” murmured Arianna, eyeing a series of black jade sculptures, which depicted men and women engaged in a variety of explicit—and exotic—sexual positions. “Imaginative.”
“Yes, aren’t they?” A sly smile spread across her companion’s face. “It takes a special individual to appreciate imagination and creativity. Alas, most people are so . . . ordinary. Their minds are constrained by such rigid notions of morality.”
“True,” replied Arianna. Recalling some of the comments she had heard her erstwhile employer make on the subject, she carefully paraphrased the same sentiments. “They have little curiosity to experience all that life has to offer.”
The smile stretched wider, and as Lady Spencer edged closer, the undulating candle flames made it appear as if the snakes had come alive. Medusa. Arianna quickly averted her eyes. According to ancient legend, any onlooker who dared to look directly at the gorgon’s terrifying beauty would turn to stone.
“Oh, I see that you do understand, Lady Wolcott.” A whisper of breath teased against her cheek. “You know, we are very selective about whom we invite into our inner sanctum.”
“I am honored.” Lady Spencer was now a little too close for comfort. Under the guise of examining one of the woodcuts, Arianna slid a step to her left. “I look forward to learning more about the nuances of art from such experts.”
She could sense that Lady Spencer was watching her intently. Push and pull. They were engaged in a complex dance of manipulation, and her companion must not guess at who was really seducing whom.
“Have we met before, Lady Wolcott?” asked Lady Spencer suddenly. “You look . . . familiar, though I can’t quite place your face.”
Arianna gave a little laugh. “I’m afraid that you must be confusing me with someone else.”
A tiny frown furrowed Lady Spencer’s brow, then just as quickly relaxed. “Oh, I daresay it’s your eyes. They are the exact shade of green as those of the Marchioness of Quinley.”
“Actually, I would say our guest’s eyes are a darker, more complex hue.” Lord Concord moved out of the shadow of the curio cabinet. “Like melted emeralds swirled with smoke.”
“I am flattered that you noticed the color of my eyes, sir,” said Arianna, fluttering her lashes.
He flicked a gesture at the erotic art. “I consider myself an expert on the human form, so I make it a point to study such nuances.”
“Have you a specialty?” she murmured.
His laugh was low, like distant thunder. “Oh, the female body is a particular interest.”
Rather than answer, Arianna turned her gaze back to the carved figures.
“My dear Catherine, why don’t you return to the drawing room? I believe Hastings and his party will be arriving at any moment, and I don’t trust Tipton or Gavin to make them feel welcome.”
Lady Spencer drew in a breath, the light catching the flare of her nostrils. However, she quickly covered the look of annoyance with a dimpled smile. “Of course, Robert. I’m always happy to play mistress of the house for you.” Sauntering off with a slow, provocative sway of her hips, she quit the room.
Leaving the door wide open, observed Arianna with inward amusement. Her former employer did not like being asked to play a secondary role in the proceedings, but was too shrewd to voice any open displeasure.
“Be careful of Cat. Beneath the soft purrs, she has very sharp claws.” Concord had a very sensuous mouth, in contrast to the obsidian hardness of his eyes. There was a flat blackness there that reminded her of a cold-blooded reptile. “And often takes pleasure using them on other females.”
All those chats over chocolate with Lady Spencer were now bearing fruit. Arianna knew that Concord and his friends were hunters at heart and liked the excitement of a chase. Lifting her chin, she fixed him with a challenging look. “She said much the same thing about you.”
“Did she?” He opened a small box on the shelf and took out a slim cheroot. “Does that alarm you, Lady Wolcott?”
“Should it?” she countered.
“You intrigue me.”
Arianna felt her chest tighten in anticipation. Slowly, slowly, she warned herself. One false move would ruin everything.
“Indeed?” she responded, keeping her voice cool.
“I look forward to—”
Before he could go on, an agitated call sounded from the corridor. “Damnation, Concord, I must have a word with you.”
“I’m occupied at the moment,” he answered.
“I don’t care if you are swiving the Queen of Sheba, we need to talk!” A fair-haired gentleman of medium height hurried in, his bootheels beating a staccato tattoo on the parquet floor. His face was ruddy, but whether it was from anger or prolonged exposure to the sun was hard to discern.
“Calm yourself, Kellton,” warned Concord. “As you see, I am entertaining guests.”
“Let them wait,” growled the other man. He gave Arianna a cursory look, then turned his attention back to Concord. “The devil take it, we had a deal.”
“Let us not bore the lady with our personal business.” The words were said softly but there was no mistaking the note of command. Flicking a bit of ash from the tip of his cheroot, Concord offered her an apologetic shrug. “If you will excuse me, I must take a moment to deal with a business matter.”
“But of course.”
“Feel free to stay here and admire the art for as long as you like. There are some books on the side table that you might also enjoy.”
“Thank you,” said Arianna. “I think I shall—stay here for a bit, that is.” Taking up a thin volume bound in snakeskin, she perched herself on a settee upholstered in plum-colored velvet. “So please, don’t trouble yourself about me.”
“You’ve chosen the most interesting work,” he observed with a lascivious wink. “I believe you’ll be here for some time.” Taking the other man’s arm, Concord ushered him back the way he had come. “We’ll discuss this in my study.”
Arianna waited for several minutes, then tossed aside the book and hurried to the door. There were no wall sconces lit in this stretch of the corridor. Standing very still, she thought she could detect a faint buzz of voices from the right. In the opposite direction lay only deep shadows, heavy with silence.
And a fleeting whiff of smoke.
It was a risk, but she could always feign confusion and claim she had become disoriented in the darkness. . . .
The scent of spiced tobacco led her through an archway and down another passage. Up ahead, a narrow sliver of light at floor level alerted her to the presence of a door set in the paneling.
She pressed a palm to the polished oak. Damn. It was firmly shut and she didn’t dare fiddle with the latch.
Looking around, she spotted a set of glass-paned doors leading out to the back garden. Easing the lock open, she slipped outside and picked her way through the shrubbery. As the evening was pleasant, the study windows might well be open to the evening breeze.
Had the gentlemen been conversing in normal tones, her efforts would have gone for naught.
At that moment, however, Concord’s visitor was expressing his displeasure in a near shout.
“Don’t try to fob me off with some farrididdle, Concord! My source at Whitehall informs me that Grentham plans to exhume the body. What the devil is he looking for?”
The slight silence was amplified by the stillness of the garden. And then, “What body?”
The question triggered another explosion. “Damn you! Are you pretending not to know that the minister’s top military lackey was stabbed to death by Lady Spencer’s chef, who has so far eluded capture despite the princely ransom on his head?”
“Ah.” The word was punctuated by another pause. “So you, too, have access to sensitive information within the department of security. I wasn’t aware of that. The public announcement was that Crandall choked to death on a piece of beefsteak.”
“Of course I have ears within Whitehall. Like you, I have my interests to protect.” Concord’s visitor sounded a little shaken. “I don’t appreciate being played for a fool.” Arianna shrunk back into the bushes as he approached the windows. “I take it you have the chef well hidden somewhere safe.”
Arianna heard a desk drawer open and shut. “You need not concern yourself with the chef,” said Concord. “It does not affect our arrangement.”
“Bloody hell, our arrangement didn’t include sticking a blade up Grentham’s arse. I’m willing to take risks, but only reasonable ones, Concord. I’ve got a good mind to . . .”
“To what?”
She caught a quick glimpse of the man’s face as he turned away from the leaded glass. Sweat sheened his skin. He was not only angry. He was frightened.
“To reconsider my position,” he answered tightly.
“You’re overreacting. Sit down and have a brandy.” Concord’s voice had smoothed to a mellow flow. “The incident at Lady Spencer’s had nothing to do with our arrangement.”
Try as she might, Arianna could catch only fleeting words as the two men settled into the two armchairs by the hearth.
Blunt . . . sword blade . . . letters of exchange . . . Overend . . . Gurney . . .
As their tone dropped even lower, Arianna decided that there was little more to be learned, and the risk of discovery was growing too great. Retracing her steps, she made her way back to the room of erotic art. Something sinister was at play here—that Concord was involved in some sordid game for profit was no surprise. The question was how to unknot the serpentine tangle of lies and deception.
“Why, Lady Wolcott, surely you don’t mean to deprive us of your company any longer.” Gavin joined her, a fresh goblet of punch in each hand. “Can I entice you to return to the drawing room?”
“Of course,” she murmured. “I should like nothing better.”
Concord rejoined his guests shortly after her return, bringing with him several servants bearing a pair of ornate Indian water pipes that emitted a low gurgling along with a cloud of sweet smoke. The laughter grew more languid after that, and one or two couples withdrew into the shadowed alcoves.
Arianna managed to appear an eager participant in the revelries, though much of her punch was discreetly dumped into the potted plants.
Despite his smiles, Concord seemed on edge. He made no move to renew his flirtations, and disappeared again after perhaps a half hour.
As it was now nearing dawn, she felt that she could take her leave without drawing any suspicion. Saybrook had, after all, demanded a report on the evening, and while she did not mean to dance to his tune, she had her own reasons for sharing what she had overheard.
Her carriage was waiting on the side street. A breeze ruffled through the ivy leaves on the garden walls, and aside from the swish, swish, swish of her skirts on the walkway, the creak of the harness leather mingled with the raspy snores of the drivers were the only other sounds.
Lost in thought, Arianna dropped her reticule in fumbling for the door latch. Swearing to herself, she turned to retrieve it from the cobblestones.
Damn.
As she crouched down, a movement in the shadows of the nearby linden tree caught her eye. A clatter of steps, and the figure darted into the alleyway, but not before the fleeing face was limned for an instant in the scudding moonlight.
Rising slowly, she felt a frown pinch her brow.
Why was Lord Ashmun lurking outside Concord’s residence?
It was, she reflected, yet another question to which she had no answer.
13
From the chocolate notebooks of Dona Maria Castellano
Although there is some debate about how chocolate was introduced into France, I believe the credit most likely belongs to Anne of Austria, the daughter of King Philip III of Spain. My research has turned up evidence that she gave her husband an engagement present of chocolate, packaged inside an ornately decorated wooden chest. Whether it is true or not, it makes a very sweet story. . . .
Coconut Chocolate Bites
¾ cup sweetened flaked coconut
¾ cup unsweetened dried coconut
⅓ cup sweetened condensed milk
3½ to 4 ounces fine-quality bittersweet chocolate
(preferably 70% cacao), finely chopped
1. Line bottom and 2 opposite sides of an 8-inch-square metal baking pan with a sheet of wax paper, leaving a 2-inch overhang on both sides.
2. Mix together flaked and dried coconut and condensed milk with your fingertips until combined well, then firmly press into pan in an even layer with offset spatula. Chill, uncovered, 5 minutes.
3. Melt chocolate in a metal bowl set over a saucepan of barely simmering water or in top of a double boiler, stirring until smooth. Spread chocolate evenly over coconut layer with offset spatula and chill until firm, 5 to 7 minutes.
4. Lift confection onto a cutting board using overhang and halve confection with a sharp knife. Sandwich halves together, coconut sides in, to form an 8-by-4-inch rectangle, then discard wax paper. Cut rectangle into 32 (1-inch) squares. Arrange paper cups (if using) on a platter and fill with candies. Chill, covered, until ready to serve.
“Another dead body.” Straightening from his examination, Basil Henning absently wiped his fingers with a frayed handkerchief. In the murky light of early morning, the library was dark as a crypt. “I dunna like the look of it, Sandro.”
“Nor do I.” Saybrook slowly circled the large pearwood desk, taking in every detail of the scene. The gentleman’s corpse was seated in a rattan-backed chair, and he appeared to have expired just as he was beginning to write a note on the sheet of paper that lay on the blotter. The pen had slipped from his fingers, spattering ink over an illegible scrawl, but otherwise it was hard to tell that anything was amiss.
A closer look, however, revealed hands curled like claws and a grimace frozen on the bloodless lips.
“Do you think he died of natural causes?” asked the earl, once he had returned to his starting point.
“Hard to say.” Henning ran a hand over his stubbled jaw. “I see no sign of foul play, but the coincidence of yet another death among the people you are investigating strikes me as awfully suspicious, laddie.”
“Indeed,” agreed the earl. He gave another long look at the body. “You could, of course, have a much better picture of what happened if you were to get a more thorough look.”
The surgeon grunted. “Lock the door. Then help me get his coat and shirt off. It’s a damnably tough job once rigor mortis has set in.”
They worked in silence for several minutes, wrestling the garments from the rigid limbs.
“An interesting design,” observed Saybrook, before setting the intricate stickpin atop the rumpled cravat.
“Looks to be a blood ruby,” said Henning, not bothering to hide his disdain. “Such a bauble could feed a regiment of hungry men for a year.”
“Few people are as altruistic as you are, Baz.”
“Hmmph.” A last hard tug pulled the shirt free. “Draw the draperies,” said Henning as he lit the argent desk lamp and angled its light over the ma
rble-white flesh. “And then tell me again how ye happened to be having a dawn appointment with a cadaver.”
“I tracked down the gentleman in question at his club yesterday afternoon,” began Saybrook. “And asked if I might have a chat with him about some recent bills of lading from the Madras trade route.”
The surgeon’s bushy brows rose in question.
“His Lordship is—or was—an under-governor with the East India Company, and oversaw trade from the southern part of the country,” he explained.
“What in the name of God does that have to do with the Prince’s poisoning and a dead military man from Whitehall?”
“I’m not sure,” answered the earl. “But when I was in Grentham’s office, he was called away for a few minutes and I happened to spot a file from the Madras office of the Company on his desk.”
“Odd.”
“Very.” Their eyes met. “And yes, I’m thinking the same thing you are. The minister is far too clever to have left a sensitive document out in the open by mistake. I am assuming he wanted—nay, expected—me to see it. The question is why.”
Henning rummaged in the canvas satchel by his side and withdrew a large magnifying glass, along with a blunt wooden probe. “Too many bleeding conundrums in this case, if ye ask my opinion.” He lifted the man’s lips away from his teeth and had a quick look at the traces of spittle. “Go on.”
“Our friend here seemed on edge and claimed to have a pressing engagement that prevented his granting my request. He put off setting another time to talk until later in the week. But then, late last night, a note was delivered to my town house, requesting that I come by before first light, for he didn’t wish for it to be known that we were meeting.”
“I take it he didn’t admit you himself.”
“No,” replied Saybrook. “The note told me to come in through the back entrance, which would be unlocked. I was directed to proceed up the stairs and come to the library.”
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