by Marlowe Mia
“Well, shall we repair to the table and begin?” Lucian strode over to the small table where the chess match had lately been held and pulled out a chair for her. He shot her an inviting grin. “Tempus fugit, you know.”
“Time can fly just as well from here,” Daisy said, lowering herself back onto the settee before she lost her balance. Standing stork-legged was not her strong suit, and unfortunately she’d be able to traverse the length of the room only in short hops. “Bring the tablet and join me.”
She patted the spot on the settee next to her.
“Good idea! A much friendlier arrangement.” Lucian settled beside her. “Here’s the tablet.”
“A much friendlier arrangement,” he says, and then it’s “here’s the ruddy tablet,” all business. Blast the man! Daisy turned her lips inward for a moment to bite back the words. Would it kill him to notice me for once?
Daisy took the ancient tablet and squinted at the marks in the gritty wax.
“Some of it’s damaged,” Lucian pointed out.
“I see that.” About a quarter of the wax was bashed in, with no writing on the uneven surface. A faint curved line ran along the edge of the damage. Daisy curled her own fingers into a fist and set it into the indentation. “Well, whoever did this had a larger hand than I, but it appears someone was upset enough to slam their hand down on this tablet when the wax was still soft. Doesn’t that suggest a finger imprint?”
Lucian leaned in. “I think you’re right. The bottom of the tablet bears Caius Meritus’s mark.”
“So it does,” Daisy agreed. “Let’s see what Mr Meritus wrote that made someone so angry, shall we?”
She bent her head to the work. After several minutes, she became conscious of Lucian’s gaze on her. She turned to face him. “You’re staring at me.”
“Forgive me.” He reached up to tuck an errant curl behind her ear. A little tingle shivered over her in the wake of his hand brushing her earlobe. “It’s just that from this angle, you remind me of someone.”
Daisy didn’t dare ask who. “Shall we attend to the tablet instead of my profile?”
“Fine, but you don’t need my help. Your Latin is better than mine,” he admitted.
“So that’s why you’re here?”
“What are you angling for, Daisy?” he asked. “Do you want me to admit that I missed you today? If it will make you happy, I will.”
Only if it were true.
“What about Blanche?”
“What about her? Does Blanche miss me, you think?” He leaned toward her. His crisp masculine scent, fresh and clean, tickled her nostrils.
“I . . . I didn’t think to ask her.” She turned back to the tablet to avoid the pull of his dark eyes. If she were dressed as Blanche, she’d have palmed his cheeks and drawn him down for a kiss. As herself, she didn’t dare, so she focused her attention on the ancient wax.
“What do you make of it?” he finally asked.
“It seems to be a ledger of profit and loss.” Daisy pointed to one column. “Here we have sales of wool and amber, so that represents profit. And on this side, a shipment of wheat was consumed by rodents and . . .”
“And what?”
“There’s something about Deirdre, the slave girl.” Daisy’s voice sank to a whisper. “I think it was Caius Meritus who slammed his fist down on this tablet.”
“What makes you say that?”
“Well, we know Caius tried to purchase her freedom, so he must have had some feelings for her.”
Lucian shrugged. “That’s a fair guess. What does it say about her?”
“‘Mortuus per suus manus,’ ” Daisy said. “Dead by her own hand. The girl killed herself.”
“We enter this world alone. And it is certain we shall step into the great dark by ourselves. But while we are here, the joy of having someone choose to spend part of their precious life with us… is unspeakable.”
—the journal of Blanche La Tour
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
“This is dreadful,” Daisy exclaimed. “Of course, I understand that all the people we study in antiquity are long dead, but in my mind, they seemed to take on a life of their own. For Deirdre to take her own life . . . she must have been horribly unhappy.”
“I’d expect slaves generally are,” Lucian said softly. “I know I would be.”
“But Caius tried to buy her freedom.” Daisy ran her fingertips over the uneven wax, then jerked them away suddenly. For a moment, she felt searing pain emanating from the tablet. Sometimes a vivid imagination was no fun. “Wouldn’t the hope of freedom have kept Deirdre from such a dire act?”
“Perhaps she had no liking for Caius. Just because a man fancies a particular woman, it doesn’t signify that she will fall into his arms,” Lucian said. “Seems to me I recall Lord Thornheld took a shine to you a few Seasons ago, and yet here you are, still on the marriage market.”
“Ugh! I wish you wouldn’t put it like that.” She grimaced at him. “You make me sound like a spoiled apple languishing on the grocer’s shelf.”
“Not spoiled,” he teased, his dark eyes snapping. “Ripe, perhaps, would be more appropriate.”
She swatted his chest. He caught her hand and held it much longer than necessary. Something in his gaze shifted from teasing to tantalizing in a heartbeat. Fire burned behind his dark eyes.
Her belly fluttered uncertainly. He’d looked at her like that only when she was disguised as Blanche. His scorching gaze made her melt just as quickly as it had when she was playing the courtesan.
“I’m glad you didn’t accept Thornheld,” he said in all seriousness.
Lord Thornheld was considered no end of a catch for a young woman with no milady before her name, but Daisy found the middle-aged rake grasping and boorish. Thornheld made her flesh pebble with goose bumps—the ‘Ew! I’ve stepped in a cow pie!’ sort of goose bumps—whereas Lucian made her skin tingle in a very different way.
“I had no idea you took note of such things.” Daisy was both aghast that he brought up the unfortunate one-sided attachment and pleased that he had been aware of her in London society at all.
“I may cultivate the image of a recluse,” Lucian acknowledged, “but that doesn’t mean I don’t make it my business to know what’s happening among Polite Society.”
Business. Yes, Lucian would probably consider the joining of two houses merely business. She decided to steer the conversation back to the tablet.
When she placed her hand on the ancient wax again, she fancied she felt a faint buzzing, as if she’d covered an angry bee with her palm.
Had Isabella slipped some laudanum into that willow-bark tea?
“These items we unearth, they certainly do speak, don’t they?” she said.
“Each find tells a tale,” Lucian agreed. “Or at least raises new questions.”
“When I was a girl, a troop of Gypsies camped near Dragon Caern.” Daisy shut her eyes, conjuring the memory. “An old woman there told fortunes and such. Frankly I think it was all rot, but she did say something that has stuck with me.”
“What was that?”
“That the things we surround ourselves with capture a bit of our essence, absorbing the events of our lives like a sea sponge sops up a spill.” Daisy turned to look at him. “And when something horrible happens, the things that clutter our homes become imprinted with the strong emotions.”
“Doesn’t sound very scientific,” Lucian said dubiously.
“No, but I wonder.” She laid her curled fist into the hollow indentation in the wax and this time felt no tingling buzz. Still, the sense of tragedy weighed her down like a heavy woollen mantle. “I wonder if sometimes the rocks cry out in a language only the heart hears.”
“I think I know what you mean,” Lucian said. “Certain places make us feel certain things. A sunny meadow lifts the spirit. A dark alley raises the hairs on one’s neck. A cathedral leads us to worship.”
“Exactly. You may think it silly of me, but I feel so
mething from this tablet.” Daisy paused to find the right words. “A deep, brooding rage.”
Lucian covered her hand with his. His brows drew together in intense concentration. Surely he must sense the simmering ire, too.
“I don’t feel anything,” Lucian finally admitted. “Except the softness of your skin,” he added with a wink.
She pulled her hand away and glared at him. He was patronizing her, but she ploughed ahead in the firm belief that she was right.
“Given what we’ve learned empirically about your Romans, it’s not difficult to infer that there must have been a romantic relationship between our thief and the Celtic slave girl,” Daisy said firmly. “Once Caius Meritus secured Deirdre’s freedom, I half expected to find a record of their marriage eventually.”
“Every woman’s happy ending.” Lucian lifted a cynical brow.
“That’s not true, and you know it as well as I,” Daisy said, thinking of her great-aunt’s distracted scowl earlier. Until that moment, Daisy hadn’t even considered the possibility that Isabella’s late-in-life union with a much younger man had brought her anything but happiness. “Marriage doesn’t necessarily result in happiness for either party, but one can hope.”
“Is that what you hope for, Daisy?”
He leaned toward her, sliding an arm along the back of the settee behind her.
“Seems to me I recall your saying something once about people coming into this world with the same wants and needs since Eden.” She drew a shallow breath. His warm masculine scent curled around her brain, making coherent thought a serious effort. His thigh rested only a finger’s width from hers. She remembered his leg’s rock-hard musculature, as well as his rock-hard member under her palms. She had to remind herself to exhale.
“Surely you hope to find happiness as well,” she managed to squeak out.
He smiled wickedly. “Some would argue that a man’s definition of happiness is considerably different from a woman’s.”
“Hmph! I suppose you are referring to the happiness you found with Mlle La Tour,” she said testily.
“Are you sure you want to discuss my adventures with that lovely woman?” He let his hand slip from the back of the settee to rest on her shoulder. The warmth of his palm radiated through the thin fabric of her casaque. She fought the urge to lean into his touch. “Such knowledge can be dangerous to a young lady of quality.”
“Knowledge is not something to be shunned.”
“Ah, as long as you made reference to Eden, I feel compelled to point out that’s what Eve thought as well. And look where her quest for knowledge led us.” He stroked her forearm absently with his other hand. “What is it about the forbidden that calls to us so strongly?”
“Is that what you like about Blanche, that she’s forbidden?” She turned her head to look up at him and felt his breath feather warmly over her lips.
“Really, Daisy, a gentleman shouldn’t discuss one lady with another.”
“Blanche would be pleased to hear you describe her as a lady,” Daisy said, her voice a mere whisper.
“And how would you know that?”
“Ah,” Daisy said, fascinated by the play of his tongue against his teeth and lips. “Blanche and I are very close. Almost inseparable.”
A smirk tugged at his mouth. “I daresay you are.”
“I’m certain Blanche wouldn’t mind if you told me what you like about her.”
“I don’t think it’s possible for me to explain to you what I like about Blanche,” he said. “I think I have to show you.”
His mouth descended to hers, and before she could protest, he covered her lips in a kiss that warmed her to her toes. Any thought of resistance died without so much as a whimper. Even the throb of her sprained ankle faded in the heat of his kiss. All that mattered was the smouldering touch of his lips, his tongue, on hers.
Her hands found his lapel and tugged him closer. His kiss deepened at her encouragement, and he explored her mouth with his tongue. His hand cupped her cheek, caressed her jaw and then slid along her throat. Daisy’s world spiralled down to their warm, wet mingling of breath.
He was kissing her—Daisy—not Blanche. Oh, he’d done it once before, but that was only to prove a point. But this was a real, honest-to-goodness kiss.
No, make that an honest-to-wickedness kiss! Jupiter! The man certainly has learned quickly, she thought dimly, remembering his first abortive efforts when he thought he was kissing an experienced courtesan. Now she’d bet Lucian Beaumont’s lips would beguile the most jaded woman of pleasure alive.
When his hand slipped lower to toy with the exposed tops of her breasts, she gasped into his mouth. He pulled back to look down at her.
“Do you want me to stop?” he asked, his fingertips teasing along the top of her bodice. Her skin danced beneath his touch.
“That depends. Lucian, are you amusing yourself with me only because Blanche is unavailable?”
He laughed loudly. “No, Daisy. My relationship with Blanche has run its course. If I return to her again, it will merely be to bid her a fond adieu and wish her extremely well. You, Miss Drake, have completely captured my attention.”
Her lips twitched in a small smile. “Then don’t stop.”
Yet part of her was saddened that he tossed Blanche aside so easily.
Botheration! Living in two sets of skin is a difficult enterprise!
“Are you offering to teach me what you’ve learned from Blanche?” she asked.
His hand settled beneath her breast. Her nipple tightened into an aching point. She was sure he must be able to feel her heart hammering.
“What I learned from Blanche,” he repeated softly. “Mostly I learned that people are far more complex and surprising than we credit them. That one never knows exactly what is afoot in another mind. But if you and I continue down this road, I hope to learn what’s rolling around in yours. I want to know all your secrets, Daisy. Does that scare you?”
“No,” she said with only a slight gulp.
“I confess it gave me pause at first.” He grinned at her.
“I don’t frighten so easily. Kiss me again. And quickly,” Daisy said. “Before my great-aunt returns with your tea and crumpets.”
Isabella stopped so suddenly in the doorway to the parlour that Nanette nearly ran the tea tray into her derriere. There on the settee, Daisy and Lord Rutland were locked in an embrace.
The passionate tableau was more than Isabella had experienced in all her years of marriage, but she remembered what it felt like in minute detail. The first rush of longing, the drumbeat of desire, the heat, the chase—Isabella put a hand to her cheek and was mildly surprised to find it feverish to the touch.
He’s eligible and presentable, and Daisy seems to like him well enough, Isabella thought as she waved Nanette back around the corner. And it looks as though she took my advice about retiring Blanche.
As a former courtesan herself, Isabella had no stones to throw over anyone’s behaviour. If Daisy wanted to dally with the man, she wasn’t about to gainsay her. And if scandal ensued, they could always marry. Daisy carried a hefty dowry, and young Rutland held a venerable title. A well-moneyed match always made society forget to count months on the first pregnancy.
Surely Daisy would be happy with him. After all, such a vigorous display in the parlour boded well for his ardour in the bedchamber.
But for a marriage to work, it must function in all the rooms of the house. Heaven knew, she’d discovered the truth of that little gem to her sorrow. Isabella hoped for more for her great-niece.
In the hallway outside the parlour, she cleared her throat noisily and gave Nanette a loud, “And for pity’s sake, don’t drop the tea service. Who knows when the next shipment of fine china from Cathay will arrive?”
By the time she and Nanette rounded the corner to enter the parlour for the second time, Daisy and her new beau were perched at opposite ends of the settee, their faces flushing rosily.
The tell-tale blush
of lust. Ah, yes! Isabella thought as she settled herself to pour. I remember it well.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Londinium, 405 A.D.
Caius Meritus made his mark in the wax, signifying his authorship of the monthly report due to the proconsul. His stylus dug into the soft surface much deeper than usual. Caius laid down the sharp instrument and flexed his fingers. He fought the urge to run screaming through the villa. Every time he closed his eyes, all he saw was his hand stabbing the stylus into Quintus Valerian Scipianus’s black heart.
If only wishing would make it so . . .
It had been a week since Caius found Deirdre, her body silvered in the moonlight, stark against the dark water in the fountain basin. Water tainted with her life’s blood.
Just as she said she would, Deirdre had freed herself.
He pulled her cooling body from the fountain, too late to save her. All he could do was cradle her till the sun rose. Her limp form stiffened in his arms as he whispered his love, his grief, his plea for her forgiveness.
Perhaps it was better that she couldn’t hear him.
She might have scratched his eyes out rather than bear his touch.
He spent the money he’d saved to purchase her freedom on a fine gold necklace to bury with her. He doubted her spirit would rest easy, but perhaps the gift would help. He didn’t want her to wake in the land of her gods a pauper.
He tried to resume his life. His first instinct was to withdraw, to retreat into the bland mask of servitude and close down his heart. He didn’t deserve a woman anyway. If he wanted to survive, he must continue his service to the proconsul as though Deirdre didn’t matter.
But she did matter.
And after a week of numbing grief, Caius decided survival was highly overprized.
Now the only thing keeping his chest expanding for its next breath was the thought of revenge against the man who’d driven his love to her last desperate act.