How to Wed a Baron Part 19

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Justin leaned in, began nuzzling the side of her throat. "I suppose I could prevail upon Wigglesworth to don his incognito-ness yet again, and hope the Inhaber is shortsighted. Must we really discuss this now? I'd really much rather you seduced me." He took her hand, laid it in his lap, proving to her that he wasn't completely joking. "Here, let me help you, if you don't know how to make the first move."

"Justin," she said quietly, tugging to free her hand from his grip.

"Darling. Try that, kitten. Try calling me darling."

"Justin. The children."

He licked her earlobe. "Exactly. The first one won't mind being conceived in a- d.a.m.n." He straightened quickly, thankfully also releasing her hand so that she could move it away from its most compromising location.

She put a smile on her face and waved to the half-dozen children who were crossing the field not twenty yards from them. "Wave to them, Justin. I think they might believe you were hurting me."

"You're not the one in pain," he grumbled as he got to his feet, not only tipping his hat to the children, but removing it to hold in front of him. "We really have to begin considering making love indoors."

Alina waved again as the children waved and then began to run across the field once more. "Tatiana naps in her room in the attic each afternoon, but Danica never seems to leave my dressing room. I think she knows. She looks at me all disapproving, so I'm more than fairly certain she knows."

"Wigglesworth dances the jig in my dressing room," Justin told her as they retraced their steps to the horses.

"Oh, he does not. You really shouldn't tease him so. He wors.h.i.+ps you. Justin?"

Something in her voice as she said his name must have alerted him, as he turned to her immediately, taking her hands in his. "Kitten, I really don't want to discuss tomorrow with you. I want us to enjoy today."

"Because you think it may be all we'll ever have?"

"No." He looked at her so seriously, she had to believe him. "I think I can...redirect the man, point him toward a more pressing problem he doesn't seem to know he has. My problem is in getting close enough to him to have that conversation without having to dispose of any more of his men. I'm also going to pray that he's so grateful to me for pa.s.sing along the information I have for him that he'll withdraw his accusations about his deceased guards. My worry, since you won't rest until I tell you, is how in G.o.d's name I'll ever be able to mend fences as it were, with His Royal Highness. If I fail there, it doesn't matter where else I might succeed."

Alina's heart skipped a beat. He was genuinely worried about the Prince Regent. Her new friends had been correct; he already had more than enough on his plate, so it was clearly up to them to rescue him from the worst of his folly.

And it wasn't as if she'd actually be lying to him, which she now knew wouldn't work, thanks to her so depressingly expressive face. She simply had to keep him occupied, his mind on other things until it was tomorrow and time for him to ride off to meet with the Inhaber.

She looked out over the field, and the children were gone. Good. "You know, darling," she said, taking his hand and leading him back toward the trees once more, "this tiny forest is fairly dense, and there is all of this late-afternoon shadow, isn't there? Why, I imagine if we were to go no more than a few feet off the path, we'd all but disappear."

Really. It was so easy to distract men. She might even call it child's play....

CHAPTER SIXTEEN.

THEY'D RETURNED TO Basingstoke to find that, for reasons only women knew-and definitely reasons only women understood-Alina was not left alone again with Justin until tea was served at ten o'clock and all three ladies announced they were retiring for the night, leaving the men to amuse themselves as best they could without feminine company.

Which meant that all three men made for the terrace and lit up cheroots Lucas pa.s.sed around. Fragrant blue smoke began to rise in the cool evening air. Nice, actually quite good tobacco, but Justin would rather be with Alina.

"What the devil was that about?" he asked his friends as Tanner handed him a gla.s.s of port, not his favorite drink, but he'd manage it. "Why have your wives suddenly turned into duennas?"

Lucas blew out a thin stream of smoke, and then smiled. "If I might quote my wife?"

"As she seems to be the one in charge, yes, do that."

"Nicole believes you have been indiscreet enough. From now until the wedding-you do have one in mind fairly soon, correct?-you are to behave yourself. Again, not my words. Oh, and Lydia agrees. Actually, I understand she more than agrees. It would seem our dearest lovers have turned into wives. It would be depressing, except that they're enjoying themselves so much."

"There's a special license waiting at my town house in London, courtesy of Prinny. If I can dare show my face there, that is. Clearly, as if I didn't have enough as it is, I now have new incentive to get back in the man's good graces."

"Prinny has no graces," Tanner said, leaning his elbows on the bal.u.s.trade. "I was one of those unfortunate enough to see him harnessed and then winched up in the air so that he could be lowered onto his horse for some ceremony in Hyde Park. Richard led his men into battle in the Crusades. Henry fought side by side with his army at Agincourt. The Louis we propped up on a throne in Paris is so fat he can't lift his foot high enough not to trip over his own red carpet, and our own poor king George is mad as a hatter and has been fitted for his own straitjacket. Prinny can't even mount a horse without aid, and the only place he's led his countrymen is into debt. Truly, our only hope is that Princess Charlotte will grow up to be another such as Elizabeth, and bring some honor back to the monarchy."

"Elizabeth, as I recall," Justin pointed out, "had somewhat of a penchant for chopping off heads. A man in my current position might be grateful that Prinny can be so easily distracted by simply placing a new, expensive toy in his greedy hands."

Tanner and Lucas exchanged looks Justin did not miss, but could not interpret.

He tossed his barely smoked cheroot out onto the gra.s.s. "Pleasant as this company is, if I'm not to be allowed to see Alina any more tonight, I may as well go visit the major and discuss something that's been troubling me. I'll be gone by first light and hopefully returned in one piece by noon, free of at least half my problems. Wish me luck?"

"Will you need it?" Tanner asked him.

"I don't know. I may have used up the last of my store of luck when the Fates gave me Alina. But even the Fates can't be that cruel."

"We've both offered several times to accompany you," Lucas said, walking with him to the French doors leading back into the main salon. "That offer still stands."

Justin clapped the man on the shoulder. "If your lovers have become wives, then their lovers have become husbands. And husbands don't go skulking about old church ruins, pistols drawn, exposing themselves to danger not their own. But thank you. Thank you both, most especially for keeping Alina safe here."

This time he only caught out Lucas s.h.i.+fting his gaze toward Tanner, who'd remained still, his expression impa.s.sive.

"She will be safe here, correct?" he asked Lucas.

"She'll be as safe as she can be, definitely," Lucas answered.

Justin nodded. He was becoming an old woman, fretting when there was no need to fret. He smiled, shook both men's hands and headed upstairs to see the major, his mind already on the following morning and his meeting with the Inhaber, most especially the logistics that would be involved in getting past the man's guards.

Strange that he'd always planned how he would eliminate somebody. He'd never before had to plan for a way to keep his intended target alive.

Alina hadn't actually said the words, but he thought she knew: killing was easier.

At the head of the staircase, he nearly turned for his bedchamber rather than have another dreary conversation about the Inhaber Novak, but then headed for the major's bedchamber. He supposed he'd owed the man an explanation as to why he would not be accompanying him tomorrow morning.

He rapped on the major's door, and then was forced to wait a full minute before the man bid him enter, only to find him fully dressed and reclining atop the coverlet, his arm tucked in its sling. Strange again. Alina had told him that the major had been up and about yesterday, and that he'd thrown off the sling, protesting that he was no longer so ill as to be kept confined to his bed.

"You've looked better," he said smoothly as Luka slid to the edge of the bed and stood up, rather dramatically holding on to the bedpost for support.

It might be prudent to tear his mind away from Alina, away from the Inhaber, away from the Prince Regent, and concentrate a bit more on the earnest, clean-shaven major. A friend is not a friend merely because he says he is your friend. You've been asleep, Wilde. Lost in love and misery. Time to wake up!

"The fever came back today. Knocked me flat, I'm afraid."

"Ah, d.a.m.ned plaguey things, fevers. I hesitate to further distress you, but I find that before I go hunting up your Inhaber tomorrow morning for our hopefully productive tete-a-tete, I have a few questions about this disputed land that's caused us all so much bother."

"Talk. Then it's true-you're actually going to talk to him at this meeting you've arranged. Lady Alina told me you hope to settle everything...amicably. But I didn't really believe her. As if such a thing is possible with a monster like the Inhaber Novak. You were bent on killing him. You went off to kill him that morning, remember? We'd discussed it, you understood. You agreed. It was the plan then, and it should be the plan now."

Well, now the fellow was looking a little more robust, and his color was better, as well.

"Ah, yes, the plan. It came to me late, this revelation I've had, Major, but I've realized that I followed other plans, created by others, only implemented by me, for too many years. Always with the a.s.sumption that the cause was right and just, or at least right and just to somebody's mind. Now I find myself chafing at the notion of possibly being forced back in the role of tool, a weapon without choices of my own."

"But that is who you are." The major's lips curved in a smile; he'd have been well served to keep the mustachios, as at least this particular smile was neither pleasant nor flattering, but revealing. "I suppose we take off the gloves now, as you English say? In truth, I've been wondering when you'd come to me about the land. It was my mistake that got you to finally wondering in the first place, wasn't it?"

Justin hid his surprise at the man's unexpected candor-and that hint of disdain that was rather troubling. Had he been so intent on Alina, on his feelings of guilt concerning her uncle and the threat to her from the Inhaber, that he'd overlooked what was directly beneath his nose? He quickly cudgeled his brains for what had to be the correct response to the major's question; there was no room for error now. Not when he'd stumbled onto something he didn't yet understand.

"Yes, certainly. Time for candor. And it was dashed clumsy of you, I agree," he improvised smoothly, walking over to the decanter and gla.s.ses that stood on a table near the windows. "But clumsy of me as well for taking so long to realize what had been staring me in the face. Wine?"

"Thank you, no," the major said, his tone once more light, conversational. "So, what exactly gave me away?"

Justin grabbed onto the seeming discrepancy he and Alina had discussed only that afternoon. "Must we?" he asked, turning about, one of the winegla.s.ses in his hand. "Oh, very well. It made no sense, you see, that Alina could not sign away the land to the Inhaber, yet her detestable aunt Mimi could. A piddling thing, especially stacked up against all that has transpired these past days. The man's attack on Alina's coach, his minions armed to the teeth and skulking about Ashurst Hall? Both events lent considerable credence to the notion that her life is in danger, and the Inhaber's permanent removal the only real solution. Yet it continues to niggle, that small discrepancy."

The major nodded. "Yes. Just as I thought. Loiza had several strong words for me on that subject after he'd spoken with Lady Alina."

"She is the one who first picked up on the thing, truth be told," Justin said, nodding, and at the same time surrept.i.tiously measuring the major, wondering what he'd missed, how he'd so badly misjudged him. Weighing the notion that the sling would make a convenient hiding place for a knife or small pistol. "Tell me more about your king, and exactly why he wants the Inhaber dead."

The major didn't strike him as a man who believed confession good for the soul. He did, however, strike him as a man who would play for time until he learned whether or not more decisive measures were necessary. As Justin was doing himself.

And him standing here in his evening clothes, and without his knife or any weapon close to hand. Still, a bit of well-placed pressure on the man's wound should be enough to incapacitate him. If not, snapping off the head of the winegla.s.s on the table behind him would turn the stem of the gla.s.s into a tolerable weapon.

Standing here, holding forth on what is at least outwardly a civilized conversation, while contemplating grinding his fingers into a gunshot wound, putting a winegla.s.s stem through a man's throat. G.o.d, had he ever thought like a normal man? What all had he lost on the day thoughts like these became normal to him?

"The king? You still think this is about the king? That I would risk so much for him?"

At last Justin believed he understood. "You're Romany, aren't you? That business about the In haber hiring Romany as part of the army he raised, and then abandoning them to be slaughtered by the French-men, women, children. That's true?"

"Unfortunately for my family, yes. From that day onward, the Inhaber has been marked for death. But he stubbornly refuses to die. Instead, he continues to prosper."

Justin wanted to keep him talking, perhaps lower his guard. "How inconsiderate of the fellow. It all begins to come clearer, although far from completely transparent. No wonder you had found it so simple to arrange the caravans, the Romany protection for Alina."

"Loiza is my uncle, and it was always planned to remove Lady Alina to the caravans, where I-we would be safer. In any event, she was never to be harmed or exposed to any real danger. The rest?" The major made a crude hand gesture that had Justin raising one eyebrow in near admiration. "Yes, the rest is lies. There is no disputed land, there never has been, other than in convenient legend. The land had only been a plausible story, although the lie difficult to maintain."

"Oh, I wouldn't be so sure of that, Major. I swallowed the whole thing like some idiot schoolboy for longer than it pleases me to realize, among other things I may have overlooked. Discovering a fellow a.s.sa.s.sin so close to Alina did nothing to change my mind. Your hireling, I suppose? He seemed almost eager to guide my suspicions to my Prince Regent, and I remember myself being d.a.m.nably eager to point him in that same direction. Information you spoon-fed him, I'm sure."

Luka shrugged, both his injured and uninjured shoulders. So expressive, the Romany. Sometimes to their detriment.

"It was imperative that you didn't think too much, but only believed what was in front of your eyes. That was Loiza's idea, once he decided I had bungled things. We'd considered others before choosing you, and that particular man had been brought to our attention. It was easy enough to hire him to lurk about the encampment in order to reinforce in you the belief that Lady Alina was in grave danger. He a.s.sured us he could speak with you and convince you of everything we needed you to believe. But something clearly went wrong."

"For him, certainly. Although I congratulate your uncle on this much, as I certainly was distracted. Led by the nose might be more accurate, if personally d.a.m.ning. But now you're attempting to tell me that Alina has never been in danger. You disappoint me. I thought there were to be no more lies."

"I'm telling you the truth. At least the truth as we'd hoped it would be."

"Ah, I'm relieved. I was beginning to wonder if there could be any truth left anywhere in this," he said quietly, remembering that the Inhaber had specifically asked that the major accompany them to their meeting. "You're a bit of a b.a.s.t.a.r.d, aren't you, Major? I actually pitied you, believing you were in love with her. But that day the coach was attacked? That bullet had never been meant for Alina. It had been meant for the target it found."

"The Inhaber had to know I would come hunting him when he learned I was to come here with Lady Alina. In Prague there had been...other attempts, but the man is always well protected. My name was somehow connected to those attempts, which is why I was asked to see the king in the first place. He made it clear to me what he wanted, and that he would help me. Yet even here in England, I would never again be allowed close to the Inhaber."

Justin's mind was whirling. "But someone at the English court, someone who had just been wed to one of his countrywomen, someone he would never question-that someone would be allowed close. Someone who believed he had good reason to want the Inhaber dead. Most importantly, preferably someone who wouldn't muck up the job the way you had, someone already known-modesty aside-as being very good at what he did. Befriend the man, dine with him, and then...eliminate him, probably with what some might term extreme malice. Instead, Alina very nearly died."

"I didn't choose the time and place of the confrontation-he did. I was protecting her, you know. I would have suggested the caravan to you when I told you about the Inhaber, after that first night at the inn in Portsmouth, as my uncle was already waiting for us on the road to London. That was always the plan, for she and I to disappear while you executed the Inhaber for us."

"How terribly inconsiderate of me, I'm sure. Hearing all of this, I'm amazed you can contain your contempt for me."

The flushed cheeks were back. "You made a confusion of everything. It was you who put all of us in danger with your mad decision to send her to Ashurst Hall. She could have been injured in the cross fire during the attack, which made it my duty to protect her. I owed her father that much. And may I remind you that, by doing so, I presented my unprotected back to the enemy."

"And now I imagine you believe I should be searching about for a medal to pin on your front? Forgive me if I leave it to others to do you that honor. Your king, I would imagine. I wonder, Major, how much of what you're doing can be laid at the door of revenging your fellow Romany, and how much at the door of your own personal ambition. Does Loiza wonder, as well?"

"My uncle may have considered this, yes. I am not in favor at the moment." The major s.h.i.+fted uncomfortably in his seat, wincing as the movement caused his shoulder to remind him of his wound-or he meant to remind Justin of his wound, a.s.suming a gentleman wouldn't strike an injured man. And how wrong he was. Justin hadn't been a gentleman for a long time.

He allowed the silence to grow, until the major apparently felt it necessary to fill it.

"I may have been promised...something, once the Inhaber was no longer a problem for the king. But that's of no matter. He needs to die."

"Somebody should, yes, I agree. I could begin a list."

"It was never meant to be so complicated. Your d.a.m.n Prince Regent-"

"Please, leave the d.a.m.ning of our future king to those who will be His Royal Highness's subjects, if you don't mind. I should have known he didn't come up with such an intricate plot on his own. He did try to appear brilliant and conniving, I'll give him that, but he hasn't the brain for intrigue."

"True enough. He was most concerned in deciding how much he might be able to profit if he a.s.sisted our king in a matter that had nothing to do with his own interests."

Justin laughed. It wasn't a pleasant sound, even to his own ears.

"Finally, something that makes sense in all of this. Prinny the plotter made no sense. Prinny the greedy buffoon and even dupe? Yes, that I can understand and even somewhat forgive. He can't help who he is. It was you who dangled the idea in front of his face of having me buy my way back to England. No wonder he's taken to his bed. He had no idea what I was talking about when I accused him of plotting Alina's murder."

"To be fair, King Francis didn't know, either. But I tell you again, Lady Alina was never in any danger."

"She was very nearly shot! I killed people, d.a.m.n you to h.e.l.l. For what?" Justin took a calming breath. He wondered if the major knew that he was seeing him through a red veil of anger. Then the rest of what the major had said penetrated his brain. "What do you mean, your king didn't know?"

Luka sighed rather dramatically. "Kings know what they want to know. And then, like all royalty, they walk away. Minions do the rest. This doesn't surprise you, does it, Justin?"

"Lord Wilde, thank you. Only my friends address me as Justin, Major."

"Yes, the inestimable Baron Wilde," the major said, and now his tone took on somewhat of an edge. "We heard about the boy in Trebon. And what you did to the father. A killer without mercy, without conscience. You were perfect for our needs. Did you really think that fat flawn in London came up with your name on his own?"

Justin ignored the question. "Why not just come to me, hire me to a.s.sa.s.sinate the man for you?"

"Would you have done it? What could we have offered you?"

Justin didn't answer.

"We had our choice of many men, but Trebon made it clear that you were the one we wanted, especially after our failed attempts, because now the Inhaber was never alone or unprotected. We know everything about you. Tell me-the man who insulted your wife. We heard you shot him in the back at the count of two," the major said almost gleefully. "Is that true?"

"Yes, of course, as I kill children and unarmed men, just as you said, without mercy or conscience. I'm a very bad man," Justin said, not giving a d.a.m.n what Luka thought of him. It was enough that the major had not stumbled on the fact that Robbie Farber had been Alina's uncle. G.o.d only knew what the major would have done with that information. Perhaps there was such a thing as Fate.

Luka nodded his head, as if a suspicion had been proved true. "I thought we had chosen the wrong man that day on the dock. You play the game well, my lord, but the savage lies not far beneath the so-civilized surface. It is not only what the king will do for me that is important. What is left of my family needs to see the Inhaber dead. We, all of us, need to know he suffered, as did the merchant in Trebon. I was glad you failed the day you went riding after him. A quick death is not what we wished for him. Now I suppose we will have to satisfy ourselves if you merely tell me where we can find him. I need you to do that now, my lord."

"I'm afraid you and your hoped-for fortune are doomed to disappointment, Major. I'll be d.a.m.ned if I'll give you his location so that you and your family can murder him and place the blame on me. He can cool his heels where he is, and then return to London. I don't-"

How to Wed a Baron Part 19

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How to Wed a Baron Part 19 summary

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