“Surely not that many.”
“Look it up. They had only one child, but he had three, and their descendants bred like rabbits. I’m not even in the direct line; I’m descended from their younger granddaughter. That and two pounds ten, as the saying goes, is good for a cup of coffee at any Starbucks.”
“Be blasé if you want to. I’m impressed. Amelia P. Emerson is one of my heroines. It was their house we were in, their things we saw. Her legendary parasol, his knife—”
“According to tradition, the knife and the swords belonged to their son.”
“But he was a scholar, not a soldier. Degrees from all sorts of places, dozens of books to his credit.”
“There are a lot of stories about Ramses Emerson, as he was called,” John said. “Some almost certainly apocryphal…Never mind my damned ancestors, Vicky, I have to talk to you about something important.”
“Okay.”
He turned around, opened his mouth, closed it, coughed, and then said, “Would you like a drink?”
“No, thanks.”
“I think I will, if you don’t mind.”
“Go right ahead.”
He took his time about mixing it. Here it comes, I thought. Anytime John needed liquor to strengthen his nerve, the news was going to be bad.
He sat down in a chair next to the couch and cleared his throat. Suzi had managed to get the goods on him after all? He was dead broke and had decided to go back into his old business? Jen was on
her way to Munich? When he came out with it, I was caught completely off guard.
“You want to have a child.”
“I do?”
“I saw it in your face, when you were working on that pathetic baby cap.”
“You did?”
“I lack the qualifications for being a proper father.”
“You do?”
“That being the case,” John said, taking a deep breath, “the only decent thing is for me to get out of your life so you can get on with it.”
I sat up straight, yelped, and clutched at my side. “Are you dumping me, you rat?”
John’s face turned red. The color contrasted nicely with his cornflower-blue eyes. “Bloody hell,” he shouted, “it is impossible to carry on a reasonable conversation with you.”
“You weren’t being reasonable, you were being noble,” I growled. “It doesn’t become you. Be yourself.”
“Be myself.” The angry color faded from his face. His mouth twitched. “I’m over my ears in debt. My business is failing. Another situation like the last one may arise at any moment, without the slightest warning.”
“Go on,” I said encouragingly.
“Isn’t that enough? Oh, all right. My mother is a consummate nuisance. She will never love you. After four weeks in your company I have lost my command of proper English syntax. Do you want to get married, or what?”
“Are you proposing, or what?” My face opened in a big, silly grin.
“According to family tradition, it’s the woman who does the proposing.”
“The tradition ends here.”
“Oh, hell.” He dropped to one knee next to the couch and clasped his hands over his heart. “Will you marry me?”
Mouth open, tongue lolling, Caesar looked adoringly at him.
“Not you,” John told him. “Vicky?”
It might not be the high point of my life, but it came close.
“I’ll think about it,” I said.
E
LIZABETH
P
ETERS
was born and brought up in Illinois and earned her Ph.D. in Egyptology from the University of Chicago’s famed Oriental Institute. Peters was named Grand Master at the inaugural Anthony Awards in 1986 and by the Mystery Writers of America at the Edgar Awards in 1998, and given the Lifetime Achievement Award at Malice Domestic in 2003. She lives in a historic farmhouse in western Maryland.
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THE VICKY BLISS SERIES
Borrower of the Night
•
Street of the Five Moons
Silhouette in Scarlet
•
Trojan Gold
•
Night Train to Memphis
THE AMELIA PEABODY SERIES
Crocodile on the Sandbank
•
The Curse of the Pharaohs
The Mummy Case
•
Lion in the Valley
The Deeds of the Disturber
•
The Last Camel Died at Noon
The Snake, the Crocodile and the Dog
•
The Hippopotamus Pool
Seeing a Large Cat
•
The Ape Who Guards the Balance
The Falcon at the Portal
•
He Shall Thunder in the Sky
Lord of the Silent
•
The Golden One
Children of the Storm
•
Guardian of the Horizon
The Serpent on the Crown
•
Tomb of the Golden Bird
and
Amelia Peabody’s Egypt
(edited with Kristen Whitbread)
THE JACQUELINE KIRBY SERIES
The Seventh Sinner
•
The Murders of Richard III
Die for Love
•
Naked Once More
AND
The Jackal’s Head
•
The Camelot Caper
The Dead Sea Cipher
•
The Night of Four Hundred Rabbits
Legend in Green Velvet
•
Devil-May-Care
Summer of the Dragon
•
The Love Talker
The Copenhagen Connection
This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
THE LAUGHTER OF DEAD KINGS
. Copyright © 2008 by MPM Manor, Inc. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
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