Ambersley (Lords of London)
Page 38
Harry and Derek met with a firm handclasp. Harry cast an appraising eye over Derek and Johanna. “You two appear to have settled things. I’ve never seen you look happier.”
Derek nodded his satisfaction. “Marriage is an admirable institution. You should try it.”
“Not me. You went through hell to find this happiness. I have yet to find the woman who would make that journey worthwhile.” Harry turned as Johanna greeted him with a sisterly hug.
“What about me? What about the hell I went through for him?” she asked with a smile. “You men always believe you fight all the battles. You never consider that a woman meets you halfway.”
“True, Johanna. And where am I to find a woman who will face adversity with no complaint? You have few equals, I assure you. I should have taken my mother’s advice and married you myself,” he quipped.
Johanna grew serious at once. “Harry, you know that if it weren’t for Derek, I would have snapped you up in a trice. I would have been a fool not to.”
“You would have been a fool if you had. You’re very fond of me, but you could never love me as you love Derek.” With that, he moved on to kiss Olivia’s hand and make her laugh with his droll comments about winter in Bath.
Christmas morning, Derek awoke Johanna with a kiss. Happily, there were no more discussions about where she should sleep.
Johanna opened sleepy eyes, and a smile curled her lips. “Good morning.”
“Merry Christmas, sweet.” Derek placed a jeweler’s box on her breasts.
Johanna sat up and broke into the box with the glee of a child. This was the first year she’d received a present from him. A gold necklace with a large opal flanked by two diamonds lay nestled in white satin. The opal held a fire that dazzled with blue and green flames and brilliant flashes of silver.
“The stone reminded me of your eyes,” Derek said. He helped her attach the clasp, and she hopped from the bed to peruse the necklace in the looking glass. Derek smiled as he watched the sway of her hips, her buttocks ripe and inviting as she stood with her back to him. He enjoyed her reflection in the mirror as well. He took little notice of the necklace.
Johanna returned to the bed, ignoring her nudity or how it affected him. “It’s beautiful, Derek, thank you. I’m embarrassed to say I have nothing to give to you.”
“Nothing?” He tried not to let his disappointment show. After all, it was their first Christmas as man and wife.
“Nothing you can open today. I’ve placed an order for something, but I don’t expect it to arrive for almost six more months.”
Derek smiled. “Can you at least tell me what it is?”
She hesitated, suddenly shy. “A baby.”
Derek had thought his happiness was complete with Johanna, but this news taught him how much more he had to learn about love.
“Come here.” His command was a caress.
She flew to him, and tangled in his arms. “I’ve wanted to tell you for days, but I wanted to surprise you, too. Can you forgive me?”
“I’ll think of some way for you to make it up to me.” He trailed kisses down her throat.
“Derek, will it matter to you if it’s a boy or a girl?”
He lifted his head to gaze solemnly at his wife. “Not in the least,” he assured her.
Johanna smiled. “I’m glad. I think I’d prefer a boy, for he would inherit Ambersley, and I can picture his entire life. But, if it’s a girl, there are so many unknowns. Do you suppose it’s asking too much if I wish for her to find happiness?”
Derek chuckled. “If she finds happiness the same way her mother has, I shall have to keep a very close eye on her until she is safely wed.”
Johanna opened her mouth to say more on the subject, but Derek silenced her with a mesmerizing kiss.
The End
About the Author
2008 RWA Golden Heart Award finalist and 2011 RWA Service Award recipient Amy Atwell has enjoyed many careers that enriched her life—horse trainer, Shakespearean actress, children's theater director, rock singer, designer of custom closets and wine cellars, caretaker of an island ghost town—but writing fiction has proven to be the greatest adventure of all. She pursued her dream of publication for ten years and earned many awards for her unpublished manuscripts before selling her first book. Amy now writes full-time and runs an active online community for goal-oriented writers. When not traveling, Amy lives on a barrier island in northeast Florida with her husband and two highly imaginative Russian Blue cats.
Connect with Amy Online:
Website: http://www.amyatwell.com
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Excerpt from Lying Eyes, published November 2010 by Carina Press
Copyright ©2010 by Amy Atwell
Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A.
Chapter 1
No doubt about it—Cosmo Fortune was a royal pain in the ass.
Mickey stepped back into the anonymity of the stage’s curtained shadows, aware that alerting the wily old coot to his presence would be a mistake. Instead, he rifled his jacket pocket for the familiar shape of the pain reliever bottle. Withdrawing two oval tablets, he popped them in his mouth and swallowed without water. With luck, they’d cut off the headache before it turned horrific.
Stress seemed to induce the blinding pain, and today had been nothing but stressful. Cosmo had failed to deliver the goods. Worse, that two-bit magician had lied to him, and Mickey was damned if he’d cover Cosmo’s ass anymore in this mess. The old guy was a bad liability, and Mickey wasn’t buying any more of his stories. He needed answers—and he needed them tonight—or someone was going to get hurt.
Yeah, like King Kong gnawing on his skull wasn’t enough.
His fingers drummed against his thighs as he waited for his quarry to finish his performance. Cosmo tried to make you think his brain power had receded like his hairline, mumbled his way out of messes with his folksy charm, and all the while he juggled his numerous little dealings with the same precise arcs as those flaming torches he now wielded onstage.
Well, this was bound to be Cosmo Fortune’s last show for a while. Quite a while.
The magician’s deft fingers conjured a dove from within the folds of his black cape. Capes had gone out with Liberace, Elvis, Houdini, for God’s sake. Amid sparse applause, the dove fluttered upward until it disappeared in the bright stage lights.
Careful, bird. Don’t be giving your boss any ideas.
Mickey glanced at his watch. Time was quickly becoming his enemy. Well, at least enemies were more predictable than friends in this game. He’d tried to befriend Cosmo, and look how that had turned out. Dangerous to have friends when you played every hand against the other.
He’d been doing that ever since he arrived in Vegas. His lifestyle didn’t allow for friendships. Not anymore.
Beyond the footlights, the half-filled auditorium resounded with sketchy applause and a few hoots as Cosmo Fortune took a bow. His assistant, scantily clad in a blue satin tutu, hauled a white rabbit roughly the size of a cocker spaniel off the draped table, handed the animal to Cosmo and all three took another bow. Finally, the curtain dropped.
Mickey marched forward to take the trickster’s pudgy arm. A strong smell of Axe aftershave wafted up from the magician and made Mickey’s headache bare its teeth again. He blinked against the flash of pain, imprinting the image of Cosmo’s mad-doctor hair and silver goatee, which always made the guy look like a cross between an aging Wolfman and a munchkin.
Cosmo’s impish golden eyes lit in recognition. “Mickey, my boy! Here, take Edgar—”
“Keep that damned carnivore away from me.”
Cosmo blinked. “It was an accident he bit you that time.”
“Like I’m going to believe anything you say,” Mickey said under his breath as the assistant came to lift the rabbit against her globe-shaped breasts. “We need to talk, old man.”
“Sure, sure.” Cosmo tried to pull away, but Mickey knew better than to loosen his grip. With a shrug, his captive relaxed and grinned as if this were all an elaborate game. “Let’s go see Iris. We’ll break her loose from that fancy party she’s attending. I tell you, you’re just the man for her.”
“I’ve met Iris and she ignored me.” Damn his matchmaking eyes. “Let’s go.”
“Oh, I can’t go without Edgar.”
Mickey gritted his teeth. The old guy could slide off a topic faster than a drunk off a barstool. Maybe a little psychology was in order. “You know, perhaps I should meet your daughter again. Let’s go find her. We can talk on the way.”
“Delightful!” Cosmo smiled, crooked as a coyote. His free hand riffled his hair and improved munchkin to Einstein.
Mickey released his hold, and the magician whipped off his cape and traded it to the lovely assistant for that damn rabbit. Its round red eyes watched Mickey while its nose and whiskers twitched in disdain. The silver collar with glittering fake rubies only made him look more like a rich brat.
So, you fur-coated hasenpfeffer, you think I’m no smarter than Elmer Fudd, eh? Mickey’s lip curled at the thought of dumping the creature on the freeway, or leaving it in the desert to fend for itself. The overfed animal would probably die if it missed a meal.
The assistant nuzzled the rabbit’s face. “Don’t keep Cosmo out too late, Edgar.” She eyed Mickey with open distrust. “You neither.” With a wink to her boss, she turned on her heel and shook her hips down the hall.
“She gave up a successful dancing career to work with me,” Cosmo said as Mickey ushered him to the door.
Mickey looked back over his shoulder at the woman. With that figure, she’d probably left a lucrative exotic dancing career, and what she saw in the aging Casanova eluded him.
They stepped from the backstage entrance to the tiny service lot and Cosmo pointed to a beat-up Cadillac in champagne pink. “I’m parked over there.”
“Great, but we’re taking my car.” Mickey nudged him toward a dark nondescript Prelude. What he intended to do didn’t need extra advertising.
“I don’t know why you don’t like Edgar.” Cosmo folded himself and the rabbit into the passenger seat.
Mickey closed the door on them and scanned the lot as he walked around the car. “No witnesses,” he muttered to himself. He climbed into his seat and drove along a mile of service roads to get to Las Vegas Boulevard. Once he was headed toward McCarran Airport, he allowed himself a smile. “You know why they sent me, right?”
“I can imagine.” The old man didn’t sound afraid at all. His pasty hand stroked the rabbit’s white back.
“Where are they?” Mickey slowed as he approached a stoplight. Beyond the intersection, the metal skeleton of a new hotel under construction rose from the desert, its moonlit silhouette clawing the sky like some black specter. “You shouldn’t mess with these guys. I thought I made that clear.”
“Why should I give over the goods before I’ve gotten my payment?”
“At this point, you should hand them over before I have to wrest them from your dead fingers.”
“You wouldn’t kill me, my boy.” But for the first time, Cosmo didn’t sound quite so blissfully sure of himself. “Didn’t they send you with my money?”
“They sent me with a gun, Cosmo.”
“But I always thought you liked me, my boy.”
“Yeah, well, given a choice, I like myself a whole lot better.” Mickey disobeyed all the traffic barrels and drove through a tight opening in a cement barricade onto the hotel construction site. A flick of his wrist dimmed the headlights, and the car eased forward, guided by an amber glow. He wove through heavy machinery before drawing to a stop near a large crane and a row of giant concrete tubes.
Hopefully, Cosmo’s silence meant he understood the severity of his situation. “Well?” Mickey cut the engine.
“Killing me will do you no good. I don’t have them on me.”
From his inside breast pocket Mickey withdrew a pair of leather driving gloves and took his time pulling them over his calm fingers. Unnerving his prey—this he knew how to do. “But you’ll tell me where you’ve stashed them.”
“You can’t force me.” The first trace of fear glimmered in the magician’s eyes, and he clutched the rabbit to his chest.
Mickey cocked a brow. “Come on, Cosmo. Like it wouldn’t be a bonus for me to shoot the rabbit first?”
As if he understood, Edgar tried to burrow into Cosmo’s tuxedo jacket.
“I don’t need to force you,” Mickey continued smoothly. “You’ll talk, because tonight, old man, you’re going to do a final disappearing act. And if you don’t tell me where those jewels are before you do, I’m going to pay a visit to your daughter Iris.” Mickey withdrew a gun from his shoulder holster and checked the empty chamber. “And when I’m done with her, I’ll visit your other two daughters.”
Cosmo’s chin fell limp. “How did you know?”
“Oh, come on. You were the one who taught me to study my adversary when I joined this little operation. Now I make it a point to learn everything about anyone I do business with. You’re nothing but a common grifter, Cosmo. You’re in way over your head with these guys.”
“I know,” Cosmo whispered.
Mickey drew a breath and eased his shoulders back. Ahh, the headache had disappeared. “Then what’s it going to be, my friend? Remember, you won’t be here to protect those little girls of yours. The best thing you can do is tell me where to find the jewels so I have no reason to visit any of them.”
The magician huddled in his seat and clung to the rabbit like it was a talisman against evil, but Mickey saw the telltale glistening of sweat in the older man’s thinning hair. Come on, give it over. Any moment, Cosmo would break and tell him what he wanted to know. And maybe, just maybe, no one would get hurt.
Mickey stole another quick glance at his watch. In less than an hour he needed to contact his employers, a group of men who didn’t understand failure. They certainly never forgave it.
With a little exhalation of breath, he looked over at Cosmo, prepared to strong-arm him more if necessary.
But the magician suddenly shoved the rabbit at Mickey’s face. “Take Edgar—I’ve gotta whiz!”
Mickey tried to get the rabbit off his chest and arms, but the animal held on with the tenacity of a bobcat. The oversized back feet kicked at him, digging in with long claws, and to his chagrin, he dropped his gun. He bent to the floorboard to retrieve it, and the damn rabbit bit him in the thigh. “Sonofabitch!”
By the time Mickey found the gun and locked the rabbit in the car, his headache had returned with a vengeance.
And Cosmo Fortune had disappeared.
~
The problem with wearing her hair up at these functions was that she never could guarantee the style would stay intact. Iris glanced around the crowded hotel ballroom. No one was watching her except some guy near the door who’d obviously crashed the black-tie affair. With his leather jacket and beat-up jeans, it wouldn’t take long for security to escort him out.
Pity, he was vaguely familiar and kind of sexy, in that tall, dark and dangerous sort of way. Not that he was her type. No, she wasn’t about to make the same mistake her mother had when she fell in love and married a Vegas magician.
Iris touched the back of her head, her smile firmly in place as she re-anchored three loose bobby pins.
Wending his way through the crowded party, David approached with two glasses of white wine and handed her one. “Do you need to go to the powder room to fix your hair?”
“I can’t tell. Do I?” She turned her head and awaited his judgment. David liked things perfect and orderly, just like she did. He led a normal, trustworthy and uncomplicated life, and that’s why she’d accepted his marriage proposal two weeks before. She tightened her left fingers, to reassure herself that she hadn’t forgotten to put on the engagement ring.
“A
ctually, it looks fine,” he said. When Iris faced him, he raised his glass. “To the most beautiful woman in the room.”
David really was sweet, and he openly adored her. Handsome in a blond news-anchor sort of way, he looked polished and well combed with just the right hint of tan. He’d made a success as junior partner at the law firm and made friends with his easy-going charm—important attributes to launching his political career. The man was practically perfect.
She rose on her toes to kiss him, but David stepped back. “You’ll ruin your lipstick.”
“Right.” She smiled up at him, and he bussed her on the cheek. Much better for both of them.