“Thank you. But I had little choice, as the situation was a bit risky.”
“I should imagine.” They exchanged conspiratorial glances. Sarah was very much like Francesca, although one would never think so upon first meeting her. But Francesca had learned Sarah’s secret—she was an artist and passionate about her work. Francesca thought her portraits especially brilliant. Evan had yet to visit her studio; he had no clue as to the talent his fiancée possessed.
“May I introduce my cousin, Contessa Benevente?” Sarah asked.
Francesca looked past Sarah and saw a stunning woman she instantly recognized in a quiet but animated conversation with Evan. He was grinning at her as she gestured and spoke; Francesca narrowed her eyes and watched Evan laugh at something the countess said. Oh ho! He clearly found Bartolla Benevente beautiful, which she was.
Francesca recognized the auburn-haired widow because she had seen her portrait in Sarah’s studio. Apparently the countess was something of a black sheep in the Channing family.
“Bartolla? I do want you to meet our city’s police commissioner and my dear new friend, Francesca Cahill.”
Bartolla turned away from Evan, already smiling. Her long dark red hair spilled in a wild manner about her bare shoulders, and she wore a low-cut red dress that, on her, was perfect—at once elegant and alluring. She was tall, her figure gorgeous. Francesca guessed her age to be about twenty-five. A necklace of diamonds that had to be worth a small ransom covered an expanse of her bare chest, and black gloves ended above her elbows.
Francesca noticed that she wore a chunky diamond-and-ruby bracelet on top of one gloved wrist. The effect was rather exciting—Francesca had never seen anyone wear a bracelet over her glove before.
Bartolla extended her hand, and Bragg took it. Francesca saw his gaze skim over her figure, and although his expression remained impassive, she was instantly jealous—she felt like kicking him . . . hard. He murmured a polite greeting. Bartolla said, “I am so excited to meet you, Commissioner. I have been in the city only three days, but already I have read so much about you!” Her smile was unusually wide and very infectious. “You are as handsome as the sketches in the New York Magazine.”
“It is my pleasure to meet you,” Bragg said with a slight smile. “I hope that thus far your stay has been an enjoyable one?”
She gripped his wrist. “Very much so.” She leaned close. The cleavage between her breasts became more obvious. “So tell me, is it difficult to run such a department? What is it like to be in charge of so many police officers? I would love to go round with you one day and see all that you do. How interesting it seems to me!”
Francesca bristled. Was this woman thinking to seduce Bragg? She felt like ripping her magnificent hair right off of her head!
Bragg smiled. “I should be delighted to give you a tour of headquarters, at your convenience, Countess.”
She beamed and clapped her gloved hands together. Then she sidled past him. Although Bragg stepped back against his seat as far as he could, she didn’t make much of an effort to get by him, and her body brushed his rather thoroughly.
Francesca despised her.
“Miss Cahill! You are the one I have been waiting to meet! Sarah speaks so highly of you. She admires you no end, and I have found myself doing the same,” Bartolla cried, with her wide, engaging smile. She had green eyes, and they sparkled.
Francesca did not want to believe her to be genuine. She refused to succumb to her charms. “I am pleased to meet you,” she said tersely.
“A woman who dares to aid the police in their work.” Bartolla’s eyes snapped with excitement. “That is fabulous. There should be more women like you and my cousin, more women who dare to do as they choose!” She spoke with extreme passion.
Francesca refused to be enticed; still, she felt herself softening. “Yes, I am in complete agreement with that.” And keep away from Rick Bragg, she added silently.
“Although I have lived in Firenze for almost eight years, I refused to follow the European traditions. There, women must never take the initiative; they must remain at home; they cannot follow their passions.” Bartolla shook her head. Then she burst into a grin. “Unless, of course, it is their passion for love, as everyone engages in affairs there.”
Francesca could only blink in amazement—for what did one say to that?
Bartolla took her hand briefly. “It is true. It is a different way of life! My husband, may he rest his soul, adored my boldness, but most of his family did not.” She gave Francesca a sly look. “As if I cared.”
“I am sorry about your loss,” Francesca said, trying not to wonder if this woman was a kindred spirit.
“Oh, do not feel badly.” She shrugged elaborately. “He was sixty-five when he died; that was two years ago. He lived a long and happy life; he had five children from his first marriage. What more could any man ask?” And she rolled her eyes and Francesca had to smile. Then she leaned close and whispered, “And he had me for his last six years.” She grinned.
That was it. Francesca liked her, but if she flirted with Bragg one more time, she would step on her toes—or pull her aside and stake her claim. “How long will you stay in the city?” she asked.
“I do not know. For I do love Italy, and I have been in Paris since last summer. I feel Firenze calling to me! But this return home is long overdue. However,” and she laughed with a very European shrug, “my family has decided to ignore my return, except for Sarah and her mother.”
Francesca did not know what to say. “I am sorry.”
“Don’t be. They are stuck-up bores. And more important, they want me to dole out my husband’s wealth, which I shall not do.”
“Oh,” Francesca said, and now she was intrigued.
Bartolla Benevente grinned at her again. “At least my life is never dull. Dullness should be a crime, don’t you think?”
Francesca had to laugh. “Yes, it most certainly should.”
Bartolla joined her in her laughter and moved past, to take a seat between Francesca and Sarah. As Evan moved past, he whispered to Francesca, “Have you ever seen such an enchanting creature?”
Francesca sighed. She refused to answer him, at least not now, but later she would set him straight. The countess was full of life and quite enchanting, but clearly she was a flirt—and Sarah Channing’s cousin.
Sarah leaned past Bartolla and smiled a little at Francesca. “I knew the two of you would instantly become friends,” she said.
They had a late supper reservation at Delmonico’s, one of the city’s best restaurants. The table they were seated at could seat six, and it was a rectangular one; somehow, Bartolla wound up at its head, with Evan and Sarah on either side. Francesca faced Bragg, seated beside her brother. While Evan and Bragg discussed the wine list, the three women discussed the musical, which had been thoroughly enjoyable, and then the party the Channings were giving for Bartolla on Tuesday.
“I am simply stunned by your family’s kindness to me,” Bartolla told Sarah, reaching for her hand and clasping it on top of the table. “Of course, my family will not come.”
Sarah smiled at her. “We love you. We always have. And even though people mistake Mother for being a bit of a goose, she is actually quite clever. And she thinks only as she chooses, not as others expect her to.”
“Yes, I know.”
“I have ordered a new dress for the affair,” Francesca said. “I never order new gowns.”
“My, whatever has gotten into you?” Sarah asked teasingly, and then she looked at Bragg with significance.
Unfortunately, Bartolla followed her gaze and then quickly looked back at Francesca. “Have you known Rick for long?” she asked.
Francesca felt that the other woman was far too astute, and carefully, she replied, “Only since he has come to the city to take up his appointment. But we have worked together on two cases, and in the course of our investigative work, we have become friends.”
Bartolla was smiling, but
her eyes had inexplicably changed. “I know his wife.”
Francesca almost fell off her chair. She was so stunned that she could only stare.
Sarah said, eyes wide, “Oh! I did not know he was married.” And she looked at Francesca with mortification.
Francesca forced a smile to her face. “Really?”
“She lived in Firenze for some time, and last summer we became friends while she was in Paris.” Bartolla spoke lightly, with a Gallic shrug. “She, too, enjoys life to the fullest. She is an unusual woman.”
“I am sure,” Francesca managed.
“We have agreed upon a wine, a burgundy,” Evan announced, but he was looking at Francesca oddly and she knew he had heard the exchange. Evan had not known that Bragg was married, either, and had already figured out that there were feelings between Francesca and him. He seemed incredulous.
“I am sure it shall be wonderful,” Bartolla said, clasping his hand.
He looked at her, clearly forgetting all about Francesca and her ill-begotten feelings. “If it is not to your liking, we shall send it back.”
“I should never expect such a thing,” Bartolla returned, her voice somehow changing in pitch and becoming a bit seductive.
Francesca turned to Bragg and realized he had heard Bartolla’s comment about her friendship with Leigh Anne, too. His face was composed, but she knew him so well now, and she could see that his eyes were not.
She wanted to take his hand and squeeze it reassuringly, but she did not.
Sarah said, “Lord and Lady Montrose have just walked in. Should we invite them to join us?” Her tone reflected the worry Francesca had just glimpsed in her eyes.
Francesca turned in her seat and realized that Connie and Neil had spotted them as well. She waved; they smiled and, after speaking to the maitre d’, began to come over. Francesca turned to Bartolla. “My sister and her husband.”
“Oh, I should so love to meet them,” Bartolla said with a smile that lit up her sea green eyes.
Francesca wondered how Bartolla would feel about sharing the limelight with Connie, who was breathtaking in her beige-and-gold evening gown, the outermost layer of which was gold lace. Montrose, following behind her, was handsome and elegant in his evening clothes. Several of the female patrons in the restaurant had already turned to glimpse him as he passed. She noticed that he did not have his hand on the small of Connie’s back. It was unusual—she had seen him guide Connie through a crowd hundreds of times, and his hand would always be resting there.
Francesca saw that Connie was smiling, but then, her sister was the perfect social butterfly—as Julia had taught her well. Her smile seemed a bit relieved—was she eager, then, to escape her husband? Francesca prayed that was not the case.
The two men stood up. Francesca also stood and hugged her sister. “How lovely you look!” she exclaimed.
Connie looked her right in the eye, and the glance said, What are you doing?
Francesca understood. Connie was not happy to see Francesca dining out with Bragg as her dinner partner. “How are you? Neil. Hello.” She kissed his cheek and when she pulled back she looked into his eyes.
And she knew instantly that nothing was right and too much was wrong; his turquoise eyes were lackluster, grim, resigned. “Hello, Francesca,” he said.
Greetings were exchanged all around.
“Would you care to join us?” Bragg asked.
Francesca hoped they would. And then she saw Calder Hart walking into the room. She almost fainted. They did not need this now!
He was with a stunning brunette who was about thirty, clearly a woman of means. Another couple was with them. In his white dinner jacket, Hart was, perhaps, the most outstanding man in the room. Francesca wondered who his dinner partner was; she wondered if she would ever see him with the same woman twice.
“We are meeting another party,” Montrose said.
Francesca hesitated and knew the moment Calder had seen them. He grinned across the room at her, spoke to his group, then detached himself from them. Oh no, Francesca thought as he began to approach them with long, careless strides.
Francesca said, “Hart is here.” If he caused trouble, she would murder him, she thought.
His gaze was lazily scanning their group. But Montrose had turned, and Francesca thought he looked tense and angry. Or was it her imagination? She glanced at Connie, who seemed more than anxious; she seemed afraid.
Francesca felt like saying, “Well, what did you expect?”
Sarah cried in an excited whisper, “Is that Calder Hart?”
Francesca glanced at her. She knew that Sarah was simply dying to view his art collection. “Yes.”
“Please, introduce me—but do not tell him I am an artist!”
Francesca softened and nodded. “I promise.”
“Rick,” Hart said, pausing at their table.
“Calder,” Bragg returned, and neither man seemed particularly amiable.
Hart turned to her, Francesca, first. His eyes warmed and as he reached for her hand his gaze moved over her beautiful pink dress. “Well, well,” he murmured, lifting her hand and kissing it. “You never cease to surprise me, Francesca.”
She gripped his hand hard and gave him a look that was almost frantic. It meant, Please! Do not let Montrose know that you are hunting his wife!
She was too apprehensive to care about Hart’s admiration now.
He grinned at her and turned to Connie and Neil. “Lady Montrose. You are lovelier every time I lay eyes upon you.”
Connie said breathlessly, “Mr. Hart.”
Francesca stared from her and Hart to Neil. He was flushed. He knew. He had to.
Hart nodded at him. “Montrose. How goes it?”
Neil’s jaw rippled with tension. His smile was a baring of the teeth. “My wife is the loveliest woman in this room, is she not?” he asked. And his stance was wide, as if he were bracing for a physical fight.
“Ah, you put me on the spot. There are so many lovely women here tonight, I am afraid to insult anyone.” Hart did not look away from Montrose. His smile did not reach his eyes. The two men reminded Francesca of two bulls in the same pen.
Neil stepped in front of Connie. “Do you think to insult my wife?” he asked dangerously.
Connie looked faint now with fear. “Neil,” she whispered.
Francesca realized that Neil wished to provoke a fight. “Neil,” she tried.
But Bragg stepped between the two of them, moving past her to do so. He took Hart’s arm and said, “I believe you know Evan Cahill and Sarah Channing, his fiancée.” Hart gave Montrose another moment, staring at him with mockery in his eyes, and then turned. “I have not met Miss Channing.” He nodded at her.
Sarah flushed. “Mr. Hart, I have heard so much about you, and I so admire your efforts in support of the arts.”
He started and then smiled, and it was genuine. “Are you also a collector?” he asked, studying her now.
She hesitated. “I hope to be.”
He inclined his head. “And I wish you success.”
“This is my cousin, Countess Benevente,” Sarah said shyly.
It had taken a while to get round to Bartolla, the most flamboyantly beautiful woman in the room. Francesca was surprised that Hart had not beelined for her, but perhaps that was because he was currently pursuing Connie.
Hart looked at Bartolla for the first time since he had arrived at their table. She remained seated, which was a bit odd, as she was the only one to do so. He bowed in her direction. Francesca was rather surprised by his non-predatory behavior, but perhaps he sensed Montrose standing rigidly behind him and was afraid of a knife in the back. Then he said, with a mocking smile, “I do believe that we have met.”
“Yes, I think in London.” She was cool. The flirtatious woman had disappeared.
He did grin. “Actually, it was Lisbon. I never forget a night that includes a full moon, the sea, and candlight.”
“Oh, really? Your memory i
s better than mine.” She arched her brows imperiously.
“Or perhaps I am thinking of a different supper companion?” he said.
Bartolla smiled, and if smiles could kill, he would now be dead. “Yes, that must be it. You are thinking of a different woman entirely. How nice to meet you, Mr., ah, Hyde?”
Francesca sighed—loudly. Everyone turned. She did not care. Clearly Hart and Bartolla had once been intimate. She should have known.
Hart was laughing, and he did not bother to correct Bartolla’s mistake concerning his name. “Well, it was a pleasure,” Hart said. “And I am off to my party.” He smiled, his gaze moving to Francesca.
Francesca could not be more relieved. Thank God, he was not going to cause trouble tonight. “Good night,” she said to him in a rush, meaning, Please go, now!
He suddenly turned to Bragg. “Oh, have you heard the news?”
“What news?” Bragg said flatly, clearly wishing for Hart to go as well.
“Leigh Anne is in Boston,” he said.
NINE
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9,1902—MIDNIGHT
The evening had been unbearable. She did not know what to do.
Connie moved about her dressing room, already in her pale cream-colored silk-and-lace peignoir. She had yet to let her hair down, and when she faced herself in the mirror over the Tensu chest she used as a bureau, she saw a pale and frightened woman gazing back at her, a woman she did not know or recognize.
But the week had been such an amicable one, she thought in sudden despair. How had it all unraveled in a single evening?
She shivered. Neil had not spoken directly to her all night. The tension between them had been so thick one could slice it with a steak knife. The couple they had been dining with had noticed. The waiters had noticed—everyone had noticed. And of course, it was all her fault.
But she hadn’t done anything wrong. Having lunch with another man, a male friend, was hardly a crime. Nothing had come of that luncheon.
Brenda Joyce - [Francesca Cahil 03] Page 15