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Bound by Moonlight Page 14


  Pickering bristled at the jest made at his expense. “I think she’s up to no good.” James waved a hand to dismiss the notion, but Pickering continued inching closer until he stood in Locke’s face. “I think lust is getting the better of you. There’s no shame in that. You’re a healthy man with healthy appetites. But there are women in town trained to please a man’s cravings. You don’t have to bring one here.”

  James slammed a hand down on the desk. “Miss Havershaw is not a doxy.”

  “I saw her with her hands wrapped around your neck, pressed up against you like a whore, she was. I’m not so feeble as to not know what goes on between an able-bodied man and a beautiful woman. Maybe you and she sleep in separate beds, but she’s willing. I could see it in her face. No virtuous lady would move into this house, and that’s a fact.”

  “That’s enough.” James could barely manage those words through the red haze that clouded his thoughts. His fingers curled into fists at his side. He took a breath and willed himself to calm before Pickering felt the blows from same. He fixed Pickering in his gaze, and schooled his voice to carry all the authority and weight of his position.

  “We’ve been together a long time. We both know that you are more than the manservant that you present to society, and I’m grateful for all the assistance you have given me in the past. But in this matter you’ve overstepped your bounds. I will tolerate no further criticism of Miss Havershaw. She’s here at my insistence, not by her own volition. Do you understand?”

  Pickering nodded, though his stance suggested he wasn’t mollified in his thoughts.

  “Now I asked everyone to leave the household early for the evening. I expect you to leave with the others. Understood?”

  He blanched. “You meant me as well, then? I thought you were talking to the others. I thought I’d just stay above stairs. Why do I have to leave?”

  “You will leave because I directed you to do so. I do not believe an explanation is necessary.” He stepped forward so as to remind his associate that James held the authority. “Pickering, I will not tolerate anarchy in my own house, is that understood?”

  “Yes, except this ain’t your house.” He took a stubby finger and stabbed James’s chest. “You don’t have a house. You don’t have a family. You don’t have a life. You’ve got me and you’ve got money, and that’s the cold, hard truth of it.”

  He turned on his heel and left the room, leaving James to ponder those biting comments.

  Ten

  TRUE TO HIS WORD, LOCKE DID COME to advise her of Pickering’s departure. He kept his distance, wished her success, and promised to reconnoiter later to review her discoveries. Once he had left, the house stilled to a lonely, empty silence.

  She should have brought Shadow back to the residence with her, she thought as she undressed in her room. Another heartbeat, even a feline one, would be welcome. But Aunt Eugenia had rejoiced to see the pet return, and so she had left Shadow behind. She contemplated wearing the beautiful munisak, but the single fastening would expose too much of her highly visible, naked body for comfort, even in a deserted household. Instead, she slipped on a colorful silk robe that her aunt had given her, then pulled one of the blankets from the bed, before proceeding to the conservatory.

  Daylight still streamed through the glass frames of the conservatory, but the faint outline of the waning moon hung low in the east. As long as the moon was remotely visible, her skin would absorb the weak moonbeams. The danger lay in discovery as she’d be fully visible without the benefit of clothing to protect her modesty. However, the house was empty, and a brick wall separated the property from the street, so she felt free to be wanton.

  The early evening air in the conservatory was rich with the scent of so many beautiful blossoms. She walked toward the back where her moonflowers were beginning to unfold their wide white petals. Gathering the opening blossoms between her hands, she breathed deeply of their familiar fragrance, letting their familiarity ease her tensions regarding the mission ahead. After all, she’d completed similar ventures before in her recovery business. Logically, there should be no reason why she felt an added level of anxiety. Yet she did, and she suspected her earlier experience in this very conservatory provided the source.

  She arranged her blanket on an open patch of floor and lay upon it, opening her robe to expose her full body to the moon. She lay powerless, vulnerable, waiting for the familiar tingling in her extremities. She closed her eyes and listened to the distant tolling of the grandfather clock inside the house, the breeze stirring the garden, and the muffled rattle of London proper. Within a brief period, she knew phasing had begun, but the sensation was dull, barely ascertainable. As suspected, it would take longer than normal to soak sufficient moonlight to phase for even a limited period of time. Fortunately, she had allowed herself two hours before she had to be in the carriage that would take her to the Farthingtons’. Hopefully, that would be sufficient.

  After a time, she shifted on the hard floor, thinking she should have requested a chaise lounge be placed in the conservatory. Just as she settled into what she hoped would be a more comfortable position, Lusinda heard a rustling sound. Her body had begun to glow, meaning she’d be fully visible if she were to sit up to investigate. She strained her ears to hear more, but the sound was gone. It had been muffled at best, like that of an animal in the gardens outside. Perhaps Shadow had not been the efficient mouser of his youth. The initial panic in her chest relaxed a little. Some nocturnal creature must have come out from its hiding spot to forage for food in the gardens. She redirected her thoughts toward something more pleasant.

  Locke. Lately, any misguided thought always managed to drift back to Locke. What would he think if he were to see her lying in the moonlight? Would he become the passionate Locke who made her insides glow much as her skin did now? Or would he become the removed, reserved Locke who stepped back from her embrace? She knew which she would prefer. A languid warmth filled her at the thought.

  The sun had fully set now. A few clouds drifted across the sky. She peeked down her length. Her skin had moved beyond the glow to a sheer almost transparent state. Another thirty minutes should make her completely invisible, though at the moon’s weakened strength, she wasn’t sure how long she could maintain that state once removed from the lunar influence.

  Normally, she would wear her widow’s weeds to enter her carriage and then disrobe inside so as to exit in her invisible state. Tonight, however, she’d decided she would disrobe closer to Farthington House, near the bushes she had noted on her earlier visit. In an emergency, she would need access to her clothing quickly, and while her own driver was aware of her...eccentricities, she wasn’t as sure about Locke’s driver. She glanced upward through the glass ceiling at the clouds slowly drifting across the night sky. Yes, she would definitely plan for ready clothing.

  LOCKE’S DRIVER PULLED THE CARRIAGE to the spot at which her own driver had stopped two nights previous. She left the carriage and strolled over to a hedge on the side of the house that offered shielding from the street. The dim moonlight combined with her dark attire rendered her almost invisible fully dressed, but she employed the cover of the hedge just the same. With practiced ease, she slipped out of her dress, veiled bonnet, and gloves and carried them to the base of a tree out of view of the street. She paused for a moment, enjoying the play of a breeze along her sensitive skin and the slight lifting in her unbound hair. She would have liked to just savor the freeing sensations, but there was work to be done, a mission to accomplish.

  The music room window stood open to the breeze, just as it had been the night of the recital. Better to take advantage of an inviting window than to arouse suspicion by opening a closed door. She climbed over the sill but froze when a voice assailed her.

  “Oh, spirits of the night, we beseech you to bring our dear niece back to us.” Lusinda peered through the darkened room to a table in the back where four women sat holding hands in a circle. Mrs. Farthington sat at the table’s he
ad with a turban on her head, chanting in a monotone before several lit candles. “Bring her back, great spirit, so that we may wish her well and so that she can pass through to the land beyond.”

  Although tempted to blow out a candle, or perhaps answer the invocation, Lusinda didn’t want to waste her precious phase time. She opened the door on the far side of the room to hushed silence. From the hallway she heard behind her, “Mabel, is that you? Show us a sign?”

  “I think she just did,” another voice added.

  Lusinda chuckled to herself as she slipped up the stairs to the second-floor bedroom.

  Although the room was outfitted with gas jets, she didn’t want to risk the attention that an unattended lamp would bring. Instead, she checked the drawers for the supply of candles used to light the jets. Using a lit candle, she located the key, hidden in an urn just as Locke had advised. She quickly identified the painting Locke had described, and after placing her candle in an empty candleholder on a side table, lifted the painting then placed it on the floor. With the recovered key in hand, it was a simple matter to open the safe and explore the contents.

  The first thing she noticed was Mrs. Farthington’s necklace. Foolish woman, she thought, as if there wasn’t enough evidence of that very thing in the room downstairs. She found a few stock certificates, a house accounting, and one letter. She scanned the letter but found nothing of political significance. As she was returning it to the safe, Lusinda heard footsteps in the hall.

  She quickly blew out the candle, locked the safe, and replaced the painting. She didn’t have time to replace the key, so she dropped it on the floor where it bounced under the bed with a soft thud just as the door opened.

  “…A bunch of caterwauling women, can’t talk business with all that weeping and wailing.”

  Even though she was still in phase, Lusinda pressed herself into the corner by the bedstand so she wouldn’t be accidentally bumped. A scent of wispy smoke emitted from the freshly extinguished candle. She hoped the two men were too involved in conversation to notice.

  “Why did you drag me from that poker game? I had young Locke by the throat.”

  “I had reason to believe there would be an attempt on your safe this evening. Do you still have the list of sympathizers?” She could see only the speaker’s back, yet his voice sounded familiar.

  Farthington laughed. “No one would be able to sneak past that group of gaggling geese downstairs. You saw how they all flocked to you. They can smell bachelors, they can, better than a bloodhound.” He chuckled.

  “Still, sir...”

  “No need to worry. I passed that particular document along some time ago. There’s not much of concern in my safe, but if you’d like to check...”

  A faint tingling began in Lusinda’s fingers and toes. She wouldn’t have long until she would phase to a ghostlike apparition, and a naked ghost at that. Lusinda thought of crawling under Farthington’s bed. She might reach the patch of moonlight that struck the carpet on the opposite side and thus delay the phasing process. However, Farthington had taken a step toward his safe and would probably trip over her prone body if she were to attempt that route. She scrunched down and wrapped her hands around her knees so as to be shielded by a tall wooden wardrobe.

  “What was that?” Farthington asked. “Did you hear that noise?”

  The bachelor’s negative response sounded near. Lusinda was tempted to peek out from her hiding place to see his face, but as he might see her as well, she resisted. The tingling intensified.

  “Ever since the recital the other night, I’ve been hearing odd noises and seeing suspicious shadows,” Farthington admitted. “I’m beginning to think perhaps a ghost haunts this place.” He raised his voice. “Stay away from me, ghost. I have no truck with you.”

  “If the document is gone, there’s really no reason to dally here.” The bachelor sounded hesitant, as if he really wished to stay. She prayed for them to go. The patch of moonlight faded, eliminating help from that quarter. A cloud must have covered the moon. Her skin emitted a soft, luminous glow.

  “Lord Pembroke is expecting my report yet this evening.”

  Relief flooded her as she heard two sets of footsteps traipse down the hall. Still, she took her time creeping out from her hiding space. Her arms were as wispy clouds on a bright day. Remembering Locke’s caution that the safe appear untouched, Lusinda felt the floor for the key and carefully placed it back in the bottom of the urn. She couldn’t very well return the way she had come, so she crept to the windowsill, opened it, and made a grab for a branch that loomed a foot from the house.

  Rhea would be proud of her big sister, she thought as she swung from the branch like one of the monkeys she and Rhea had seen at Regent’s Park. Of course, that monkey did not glow with an unearthly luminescence. She found purchase on a lower branch and worked her way down to the final leap to the ground. The cloud covering the moon finally traveled beyond the crescent, allowing its beams to reach her once more. She landed on the ground with a thud and a sprinkling of leaves.

  “I see her! I see her!” a woman’s voice called from the music room window. “Dear saints above, she hasn’t a stitch on!”

  Lusinda spread her tingling arms out wide to accept the full power of the direct moonbeams. The tingling intensified till she was quickly rendered invisible once more.

  “Where? Where?” Farthington’s voice called, tinged with disappointment. He braced his arms on the sill, pushing his head far through the open window. “I don’t see a naked ghost. You must have imagined it.”

  “Had I imagined her,” the woman responded, “she would have been dressed.”

  Lusinda ran to retrieve her clothing before another stray cloud could settle the argument.

  JAMES SPED TO FARTHINGTON HOUSE as soon as the old codger was called away. The message handed to Farthington suggested he return home immediately, and even the lure of a fistful of aces and a fat lucrative pot couldn’t keep him at the table. James waited a few minutes to avoid suspicion, then fled the gentlemen’s club and flagged a cab in a race for Berkeley Street where his carriage stood waiting.

  He found the carriage, but not the occupant. After dismissing his hired hack, he glanced to the upstairs window and noted it was still closed...and dark. Was she there? Did she make it to the bedroom? Or had she been discovered and was now being held elsewhere in the house? Was that the reason behind Farthington’s hasty exit? Worry chewed at his gut as he contemplated his next move.

  He should never have blackmailed her into joining his espionage efforts. That’s what he’d done, threatened her to keep her so other operatives couldn’t use her. He’d given her no choice and then marched her off into a treacherous game with deadly results. Disgust rose in his throat. He was no better than the toady chieftain who had him whipped within an ounce of his life. No better at all. He didn’t deserve a life, a family, happiness—

  Wait! A movement of sorts in the upstairs bedroom caught his attention. He was too far to see clearly, but thin shadows moved within the parameters of the window frame. What did that mean? Damnation. Worrying about someone else in possible jeopardy was worse than being in jeopardy oneself. Especially when that someone kissed with a passion that made him weak in his knees.

  He maneuvered his way closer to the upstairs window. Think, man, think! This was no time to lose one’s intellect to passion. How could he be sure she was inside? His gaze swept the area, noting something dark on the ground near a tree. He investigated and found her clothes. Yes, that made sense. The shrubs would hide her from the street while the tree blocked the view from the window. Still, the thought that she was naked and in the company of that vile Farthington filled him with trepidation. He glanced up toward the window and saw the pane rise. For a moment he forgot to breathe, then she appeared, or rather something more translucent than opaque advanced to the ledge. Lusinda! It had to be. Relief flooded his senses. Dear Lord, she was beautiful, and agile, and brave. A Chinese acrobat could not maneuver
a tree with more grace. He had suspected her stumble on the stool was orchestrated. Here, then, was his proof. She landed not far from his location, spread out her arms, then instantly vanished.

  A commotion in the music room drew his attention. James stepped deeper into the shadows moments before Farthington looked out. He could only imagine what the old man thought when Lusinda disappeared before his very eyes. If James hadn’t witnessed it himself, he would doubt his sanity as well. He couldn’t stop smiling. Truth be told; he was liable to break out into a jig.

  Suddenly, her scent touched his nostrils. “Lusinda?”

  “Weren’t you to keep him occupied?”

  An annoyed voice but hers just the same spoke from the area to his right. He glanced quickly toward the moon. Dear Lord, what he wouldn’t give for a cloud. He couldn’t keep the smile from his face as he addressed her position. “You’re safe, that’s all that matters.”

  “I thought that the contents of the safe were all that mattered.”

  She’d moved! The minx was now to his left. This was different than when he had her cornered in his study. Then she was confined to a room, and easy to track. Here she could disappear before he knew she was gone. Her scent diffused in the breeze, making that means of finding her unreliable. She could walk away and never be discovered. That realization smacked him between the eyes. How could he control someone he couldn’t see? The answer was as troubling as the question. He couldn’t.

  “We’re not out of danger yet,” he said, suddenly wanting her in a confined area. “Farthington might decide to investigate.”

  She laughed. “If he does, he’ll find only a gentleman who refused to give up the game, and a pile of women’s clothing. I wonder what the society columns would make of that?”