“What the devil are you doing up here, Miss Bromley?” he said, not bothering with even a semblance of a polite greeting. “I thought you’d be downstairs.”
“And a pleasant good evening to you, too, Mr. Jones,” Victoria said dryly.
“Victoria,” Caleb said, looking as if he had just now realized she was present. He took her gloved hand and bowed over it with surprising grace. “My apologies. Didn’t see you there.”
“Of course you did,” Victoria said. “It was just that you were concentrating entirely on Miss Bromley.”
Caleb’s brows rose slightly. “I was looking for her, yes.”
“Do you have some news?” Lucinda asked.
“Yes, as a matter of fact.”
He gripped the balcony railing and looked down as though suddenly fascinated by the patterns the dancers were weaving on the ballroom floor. When he turned back to her, the controlled energy in his eyes seemed to burn a little hotter.
“If you will do me the honor of dancing with me, I will tell you what I have learned,” he said.
Stunned, she could only stare at him, mouth open in what she suspected was a most unbecoming manner.
“Uh,” she got out after an eternity.
“Run along,” Victoria said. She rapped the back of Lucinda’s gloved hand sharply with her fan. “I’ll keep an eye on Patricia.”
The sting of the fan broke Lucinda’s trance. She swallowed and recovered her senses.
“Thank you very much, Mr. Jones,” she said. “But it has been some time since I danced the waltz. I fear I am out of practice.”
“So am I, but the pattern is a simple one. I’m sure we’ll both manage not to trip over our own feet.”
He took her hand and hauled her up off the padded bench before she could think of any more arguments. She glanced back once over her shoulder, but there was no help from that quarter. Victoria was watching them with a most peculiar expression.
The next thing she knew she was being led swiftly along a long, dim hall and down a narrow, cramped flight of servants’ stairs. When they reached the bottom of the staircase Caleb opened a door and drew her out into the dazzling ballroom. He forged a path through the crowd with characteristic single-minded determination.
And then, in a heady instant, she was in his arms, just as she had been that day in the library when he kissed her.
He swept her into the sensual pattern of a slow waltz. She knew that heads were turning, both on the floor and off; knew that she and Caleb were drawing the sort of attention she had so hoped to avoid. But she no longer cared. Caleb’s powerful hand was warm and strong at the small of her back and he was looking at her as though there was no one else in the room. Heat and energy enveloped them, inextricably entwined with the music.
“You see?” he said. “The patterns of the waltz are not the sort of thing one forgets.”
She was not dancing, she thought. She was flying. “So it would seem, Mr. Jones. Now, tell me your news.”
“I spoke with Inspector Spellar shortly before I came here. He has made an arrest in the Fairburn case based on the evidence in Daykin’s little book of transactions.”
“Lady Fairburn?”
“No, the sister, Hannah Rathbone. She collapsed and confessed immediately when Spellar showed her the notebook. Rathbone’s name is in it.”
“I see. I suppose she killed Fairburn because she wanted her sister to become a wealthy widow.”
“That would certainly be the logical explanation. But according to Spellar, Rathbone murdered her brother-in-law because he’d just ended the affair that he was having with her.”
“Good heavens. So it was a crime of passion, not of money.”
“As I said, not the most logical of motives but there you have it. You are no longer in danger of being arrested for the Fairburn murder.”
“Mr. Jones, I cannot thank you enough—”
“There is, however, still the problem of your fern showing up in the poison that Daykin sold.”
Alarm jolted through her. “But with Mrs. Daykin dead, there is no one who knows that it was an ingredient in her poison.”
“There is at least one person who knows,” Caleb said.
“Oh, dear. You mean Dr. Hulsey.”
“We can now say with great certainty that Hulsey was well acquainted with Mrs. Daykin. He made at least some of the poison she sold.”
A thought struck her. “Do you think Hulsey might be the one who killed her?”
“No,” Caleb said.
“What makes you so sure of that?”
“Hulsey specializes in dangerous chemicals. If he wanted to murder someone, he would have been inclined to employ a weapon with which he was familiar.”
“Poison.”
“Yes.”
A chill went through her. “But I did not detect any on the body.”
“Which tells us that someone else killed her.”
“One of her blackmail victims?”
“Possible,” Caleb allowed. “But according to that notebook of hers, she had been in the business for years. The fact that someone only recently decided to murder her is—”
“I know. Too much of a coincidence. I thought the same thing about my father’s so-called suicide. I could not believe that he would put a pistol to his head immediately after his partner was found dead.”
“What the hell?” Caleb came to an abrupt halt in the middle of the dance floor. “Your father did not take poison?”
Aware that those around her were staring in avid curiosity, she lowered her voice to a whisper.
“No,” she said.
“Damnation. He was murdered. Why the devil didn’t you tell me?”
He grabbed her wrist and hauled her off the floor, through the crowd and out into the night-darkened gardens. When they were alone he gripped her shoulders.
“I want to know exactly what happened to your father,” he said.
“He was killed with a pistol,” she said. “It was made to look as if he pulled the trigger himself. But I am convinced that someone shot him.”
Energy whispered in the night. She could feel the force of Caleb’s talent.
“You are right, of course,” he said.
An incredible tide of relief swept over her.
“Mr. Jones, I do not know what to say. You are the only one who has ever believed me.”
“It’s all connected,” Caleb said softly.
“What is?” she asked, a little breathless from the dancing and the cold fire of his energy swirling around her. “Have you had some sort of insight?”
“Yes, thanks to you.” His jaw tightened. “I should have thought to ask the obvious question back at the start of this affair. I was too intent on tracking Hulsey.”
“What is this obvious question?”
“How does your father’s murder and the murder of his partner connect to the theft of the fern?”
“What?” Shaken, she searched his shadow-etched face. “I don’t understand. How could there possibly be a link between those events?”
“That, Miss Bromley, is what I must discover.”
“But you sense that there is one?”
“As I said, I should have observed it sooner. I can only say that I have been somewhat distracted.”
“Well, it is not as if you have not had your hands full, what with destroying that evil cult and discovering that the man I knew as Dr. Knox was the mad scientist you have been searching for. Not to mention the little matter of finding Mrs. Daykin’s body and making certain that I did not get arrested for murder. You have been rather busy of late, sir. One can understand why you might not have bothered with the murders of two men who died a year and a half ago.”
“Those were only minor issues,” he said. “It was the other thing that got in the way.”
“What other thing?”
“While we are on the subject, I believe that your fiancé’s death is also linked to this business. It has to be.”
She was stunned anew. “You can’t mean to connect Mr. Glasson’s murder to this thing, too.”
“It is all of a piece,” he said. “The pattern is quite clear now. The problem, as I said, was the great distraction that has interfered with my thought processes.”
“Indeed?” She raised her brows. “And just what was this astonishing distraction that is so powerful it caused the very talented Caleb Jones to make a mistake?”
“You,” he said simply.
She was speechless.
“What?” she finally managed.
He caught her face between his strong hands. “You are the distraction, Lucinda. I have never known anyone who could disorder my thoughts the way you do.”
“That does not sound like a compliment.”
“It was not intended as a compliment. It was a statement of fact. Furthermore, I do not think I will be able to concentrate well until I know for certain that you find me to be equally distracting.”
“Oh,” she whispered. “Yes. Yes, I do find you distracting, sir. Extremely so.”
“I am very pleased to hear that.”
His mouth closed over hers.
Her senses were suddenly on fire, wide open to the night. The gardens came alive in the darkness, burning with an iridescent radiance that swept across the spectrum. Seconds ago the flowers blooming at the edge of the terrace had been invisible in the shadows. Now they were transformed into small fairy lanterns, pulsing light in a myriad of nameless colors. The grass produced an emerald aurora. The tall hedges were transformed into glowing green walls. The energy of life sang to her senses.
Caleb pulled her closer, tighter. His mouth slid heavily off hers and found her throat.
“Do you want me, Lucinda?” he asked roughly. “That is what I must know. I do not think that I will ever again be able to focus properly until the question is answered.”
She had abandoned all hope of ever experiencing the power of passion. Now the awesome force of it swirled through her like a great tempest. She would betray no one if she let these powerful winds sweep her away. The only risk was to her heart, and it was a grave one. But the thought of never knowing the glorious sensations that she sensed awaited her in Caleb’s arms was by far the more appalling alternative. Better to have loved and lost.
She raised her gloved fingers to his face. “I desire you, Caleb. Is that the answer you want?”
“More than I have ever wanted anything in my life.”
His mouth closed over hers, again, searing and hungry. The music and muffled sounds of the ballroom seemed to fade into another dimension. Raw power pulsed hot in the night. The tide of bright, fierce energy drew her deeper into an intoxicating chaos.
She wrapped her arms around Caleb’s neck and opened her mouth for him. The shimmering atmosphere shifted around her. It took her a few seconds to realize that Caleb had picked her up in his arms and was carrying her away from the terrace, deep into the phosphorescent gardens.
“I can feel the heat in you,” he said. “Your senses are hot, aren’t they?”
“Yes.” She drew her fingertip along the line of his jaw. “So are yours.”
“This garden is your world. What does it look like to you?”
“It is magical. Alive. Every plant, down to the tiniest blade of grass, gives off a faint luminescence. I can see a thousand shades of green in the leaves. The flowers shine with a light all their own.”
“It sounds like a fairy-tale landscape.”
“It is,” she said. “What do you see?”
“Only you.” He stopped in front of a low, darkened structure. “Open the door.”
She reached down, found the knob and twisted it. The door swung inward. A pleasant warmth and a maelstrom of intense botanical scents flowed out. Her senses hummed with the potent energy of dried lavender, roses, chamomile, mint, rosemary, thyme and bay. In the moonlight she could see dark bunches of herbs and flowers suspended from the ceiling. On the floor were a number of baskets filled with more fragrant clusters.
“A drying shed,” she said, enthralled. “I have one of my own.”
“We can be private here.”
He lowered her slowly to her feet and crossed the room to where a wooden chair stood. He picked up the chair and wedged it under the doorknob. Then he came back to her.
“You think of everything,” she said.
“I try.”
Very gently he removed her eyeglasses and set them aside. Then he took her back into his arms.
She was trembling so with anticipation and excitement that she had to clutch his shoulders in order to keep her balance.
He kissed her again and then he turned her gently so that her back was to him. He began to unfasten the delicate hooks of her stiffened bodice. Within moments the gown was open.
He kissed her bare shoulder. “Thank the Lord you are not wearing one of those damned steel corsets.”
“The Rational Dress Society considers them to be very unhealthy,” she explained.
He laughed, a low, throaty growl. “Not to mention a great nuisance at times like this.”
He turned her back to face him and gently lowered the bodice, taking the tiers of elaborately draped skirts with it, until the gown pooled around her feet. She was left in only her thin chemise, drawers, stockings and shoes.
Entranced, she unbuttoned his coat and pushed her hands inside, thrilling to the heat of his body. He shrugged out of the garment with quick, impatient motions, unknotted his tie and unfastened the front of his shirt. She flattened her palms against his bare chest.
“We need a bed,” Caleb said.
He moved away from her, picked up the nearest basket and turned it upside down. A vast quantity of dried herbs and flowers tumbled out of it, geraniums, rose petals, eucalyptus, lemon balm. He emptied a second and then a third and fourth basket until there was a large, aromatic heap on the floor. Her wide-open senses were so dazzled by the heady essence of so much massed botanical energy that it was all she could do not to dive into the pile.
Caleb covered the fragrant mattress with his coat and drew her down onto the makeshift bed. The fragile, dried herbs and petals were crushed beneath their weight, releasing more ethereal, intoxicating energy into the atmosphere.
He stretched out alongside her, half covering her, and closed one hand over the curve of her breast. Something inside her was stirred to an even higher level of awareness. She heard a soft, choked cry and realized that it had come from her own throat.
“Hush,” he ordered gently. He sounded as if he was swallowing laughter or possibly a groan. He brushed her lips in warning. “We have this place to ourselves but we do not want to risk drawing the attention of others who might decide to take a stroll through the gardens.”