Tasia shook her head in amazement. “No, I know how you love your jewels—”
“Take them,” Marie insisted. “I just wore the small ones tonight. Really, I'm tired of these baubles.”
The baubles, as she called them, were a collection of priceless gems. There were twin ropes of pearls and diamonds, and a gold bracelet with huge cabochon sapphires. The stones were polished but unfaceted, like gleaming blue eggs strung together in a thick web of gold. Ignoring Tasia's protests, she clasped the bracelet around Tasia's wrist and slid heavy rings on her fingers. There was a cluster of blood-colored rubies—“Always wear rubies, they help to purify the blood”—a ten-carat yellow diamond, and a creation of emeralds, sapphires, and rubies shaped in the pattern of a firebird. “Your father gave this to me when you were born,” Marie finished, pinning a bouquet of jeweled flowers to the bodice of her dress.
“Thank you, Maman.” Tasia stood up and allowed Luke to drape the green mantle over her shoulders. When the hood was pulled over her head, the garment would cover her completely. She looked at Marie with a worried frown. “When they discover you waiting here instead of me—”
“I'll be perfectly all right,” Marie assured her. “Nikolas has given his word.”
Nikolas came into the bedroom, his mouth tight with impatience. “Enough of this female chatter. Come, Tasia.”
Luke squeezed Tasia's shoulder and gently pushed her toward Angelovsky. “I'll join you later,” he murmured.
“What?” Tasia spun around to face him. The blood drained from her cheeks. “You're coming with me, aren't you?”
Luke shook his head. “It would look suspicious if I left now. Better for Radkov and his officers to think I stayed up here to comfort you. They're watching all of us closely. I'll leave soon and meet you and Biddle at Vasilyevsky Island.” Located on the east side of the city, the island possessed a sea port that opened into the Gulf of Finland.
Tasia was stricken with panic. She reached for her husband, clinging to his lean waist. “I won't go unless you're with me. I can't leave you now.”
Luke smiled reassuringly. In full view of Marie and Nikolas, he pressed a kiss to her lips. “Everything's going to be all right,” he murmured. “I'll follow you soon. Go, and please don't argue.”
Nikolas interrupted, unable to help himself. “‘Please don't argue’?” he repeated acidly. “Now I believe what they say about Englishmen being ruled by their women. Pleading with her to obey your commands, when you should be disciplining her with a leather strap. The day any self-respecting Russian speaks to a disobedient wife that way—” He broke off and regarded the two of them with horrified disapproval.
Tasia scowled back at him. “Thank God I'm not married to a ‘self-respecting Russian.’ You don't want wives, you want slaves! Heaven help a woman here with any intelligence or spirit, or opinions of her own.”
Nikolas looked over her head at Luke, his golden eyes suddenly glinting with amusement. “You've ruined her,” he said. “She's better off in England.”
Obeying her husband's nudge, Tasia let go of him and went toward Nikolas. She began to pull the hood of the mantle over her head. All at once she stopped as she saw a shadow in the sitting room and heard the sound of a carpet-muffled footstep.
The others heard at the same time. Luke was the first to react, moving into the sitting room with quick, noiseless strides. He grabbed the intruder, an eavesdropping sentry, and clapped his hand over the man's mouth. The sentry struggled so hard that they both slammed sideways into the wall. Gamely Luke held on, grunting with the effort of subduing the intruder. One shout would alarm the entire houseful of guards, and ruin all chances of getting Tasia out of Russia.
Luke was dimly aware of Nikolas's approach. There was a flash of steel, and a silent, startling explosion of violence, and then the man stopped struggling in his arms, beginning to sag heavily. Gasping for breath, Luke realized that Nikolas had stabbed the sentry and had shoved a wad of fabric—a towel, or perhaps a coat—over the fatal chest wound to staunch the flow of blood. The soldier gave one least death convulsion in Luke's arms.
“Don't let his blood splash on the carpet,” Nikolas muttered, easing the limp body away from him.
Luke felt sick. He caught a glimpse of the women's faces: Marie's tense and pale, Tasia's blank. Resolutely he swallowed back the twinge of nausea and helped Nikolas carry the dead sentry out of the suite. Several doors along the hallway there was a room piled with rows of paintings and unused furniture. They worked quickly, depositing the body in the corner and concealing it with a desk and a stack of framed canvases.
“Another skeleton for the family closet,” Nikolas said facetiously, taking a critical glance at their handiwork. His face was like granite, his yellow eyes eerily flat. Luke's first reaction was to despise Angelovsky for his callousness, but he noticed that Nikolas had clenched his fist so tightly that his knuckles formed white peaks amid the bloodstains on his skin. “You're a fool if you think the sight of death disturbs me,” Nikolas murmured. “It used to, but now it's the absence of feeling that bothers me.”
Luke eyed him skeptically. “Whatever you say.”
“Let's go,” Nikolas said. “All this scuffling, and moving furniture—soon they'll discover the soldier is missing and we'll have an entire regiment up here.”
Tasia was very calm as she descended the stairs on Nikolas's arm. She kept her head bent, as a sorrowful mother might, letting the hood of the mantle drape over her face. The death of the soldier had shocked her into a state of absolute clarity. She took strength from Nikolas's cold determination. She was leaving the palace where Misha had died and her strange journey had begun, except now there was Luke, and a home to which she desperately wanted to return. Inside the cloak, she slid her free hand over her abdomen, where her unborn baby nestled.
God, just give me the chance to go back, let us all reach safety
…Her lips moved in a soundless prayer as she walked with Nikolas through the hall of soldiers and felt their gazes on her.
Someone stepped in front of them, forcing them to halt. Tasia curled her fingers into Nikolas's wrist. He didn't flinch from the bite of her nails. “Colonel Radkov?” Nikolas said coolly. “Is there something you want?”
“Yes, Your Highness. Madam Kaptereva is renowned as a woman of surpassing beauty. I would like to be honored with a brief glimpse of her.”
Nikolas's reply dripped with contempt. “The kind of request a stupid peasant would make. Have you no respect for a mother's grief, that you would insult her in such a manner?”
There was a long, challenging silence. Nikolas's forearm was taut beneath Tasia's hand.
Finally Radkov backed down. “Forgive me, Madam Kaptereva,” he murmured. “No insult intended.”
Tasia nodded beneath the green mantle, continuing to walk with Nikolas as the officer stepped aside. Carefully she stepped over the threshold and through the outside vestibule. She felt the cool night air on her face. Her foot touched the pattern of colored bricks artfully embedded in the side of the street. They went to a waiting carriage, which was poised outside a circle of light from the streetlamp.
“Quickly,” Nikolas said, pushing her up the tiny steps and into the carriage.
Tasia turned and grasped his hard wrists. Her eyes were luminescent as she stared at him from the shadow of the hooded mantle. Her sense of impending doom, not for herself but for him, was suddenly overwhelming. She had a flashing vision of him crying in agony, his face covered with blood. She trembled in distress. “Nikolas,” she said urgently, “you must leave Russia very soon. You must consider joining us in England.”
“Not if my life depended on it,” he said with a short laugh.
“It does,” she whispered intensely. “It
does
.”
Nikolas stared at her, his smile fading. He leaned into the carriage as if to tell her something important, confidential. She stayed very still. “People like you and me always survive,” he murmured. “We take our fates into our hands and mold them to our liking. How many women would have gone from that rotting prison cell to being the wife of an English aristocrat? You used your beauty, your wits, and everything else you have to get what you wanted. I'll do no less for myself. Don't worry on my account. I wish you happiness.” She felt his cool, firm lips touch hers, and she shivered as if she had tasted death.
The carriage door closed, and Tasia settled back against the cushions as the driver snapped the horses into action. She gasped in surprise as she realized there was another presence in the vehicle. “Oh—”
“Lady Stokehurst,” came Biddle's mild voice. “It is gratifying to find you in good health.”
Tasia laughed breathlessly. “Mr. Biddle! Now I'm finally beginning to believe I'm going home.”
“Yes, my lady. As soon as we collect Lord Stokehurst at the shipyards.”
She sobered at once, her face tense with concern. “It won't be soon enough to suit me.”
Marie joined Luke at the window to watch the departing carriage. She gave a relieved sigh. “Thank God she's safe.” She turned to Luke and touched his arm. “Thank you for saving Anastasia. It is a comfort to me to know that she has a husband who is so loyal. I must admit, at first I was dismayed by your lack of wealth, but now I see there are more important things, such as trust and devotion.”
Luke opened and closed his mouth several times. As the heir to a dukedom who had added an industrial fortune to his already considerable landed income, possessing estates and forests that covered territory in seven counties—not to mention the majority of shares in an expanding railroad company—he had never anticipated being confronted by a mother-in-law who had decided to overlook his “lack of wealth.” “Thank you” was all he could manage to say.
Marie was suddenly misty-eyed. “You're a good man, I can see that. Kind and responsible. Tasia's father, Ivan, was like that. His daughter was his greatest happiness. ‘My treasure, my firebird,’ he always called her. His last words were about Tasia. He begged me to make certain she would marry a man who would take care of her.” Marie began to sniffle. “I thought my daughter would be well off as the wife of an Angelovsky. She would never want for anything. I convinced myself it was for the best. I didn't listen when she begged me not to force her into marriage with Mikhail. To me she was just a child prattling about love and dreams…” She bent her head and dabbed at her eyes with the handkerchief Luke gave her. “I'm responsible for what happened to Tasia.”
“It does no good to assign blame,” Luke murmured. “It's been difficult for everyone. Tasia is going to be fine now.”
“Yes.” Marie leaned up to kiss him on each cheek, in the European fashion. “You must go to her right away.”
“My thoughts exactly,” he said, patting her silk-covered back. “Don't worry about your daughter, Madam Kaptereva. I'll keep Tasia safe in England—not to mention happier than she ever dreamed.”
Tasia and Biddle waited alone at the corner of a warehouse used for storing cargo. There were pockets of activity around them: sailors on leave from their ships, dock laborers, a few merchants squabbling over damaged cargo. Drawing into the shadows, Tasia watched anxiously for a sign of her husband.
Biddle sensed her growing worry. “It's too soon for him to have reached the island, Lady Stokehurst,” he said quietly.
She took a deep breath and tried to calm herself. “What if they have discovered I'm gone? They could detain him for questioning by the state police—he could be accused of committing political crimes against the imperial government, and then—”
“He'll be here shortly,” Biddle assured her, though a note of worry had entered his voice.
Tasia went rigid as she noticed a tall man approaching them, dressed in the black, red, and gold uniform of the corps of gendarmes, a special section of police serving under the jurisdiction of the Imperial Chancellery. As the gendarme came closer, the suspicion on his whiskered face was blatant. He would want to know who they were, and what they were doing there. “Oh, God,” Tasia whispered, thrown into panic. Her thoughts moved at lightning speed. She turned and wrapped her arms around the surprised valet beside her. Ignoring his shocked sound, she pressed her lips to his. She continued the embrace until the gendarme reached them.
“What is this?” he demanded. “What's going on?”
Tasia sprang back from Biddle and gasped in feigned dismay. “Oh, sir,” she said breathlessly, “I beg you, don't tell anyone of our presence here! I have come here to meet with my English beau…My father doesn't approve of him…”
The gendarme's suspicion turned to frowning censure. “No doubt your father would beat you with a birch rod if he knew what you were doing.”
Tasia looked at him beseechingly, her eyes filling with convincing tears. “Sir, this is our last evening together…” She drew closer to Biddle and clung to his arm.
The gendarme looked at Biddle's small, slight frame with skepticism, clearly wondering how he had been able to inspire such passion. A long, agonizing moment passed before he relented. “Say your goodbyes and tell him to go,” he told Tasia gruffly. “And trust your father to know what is best for you. Obedient children are a joy to their parents. A pretty girl like you—why, they'll find a far better match for you than this scrawny little Englishman!”
Tasia nodded meekly. “Yes, sir.”
“I'll pretend I haven't seen you, and continue my patrol around the shipyards.” He shook his finger at her. “But you had better be gone by the time I return.”
“Thank you,” she said, plucking one of the jeweled rings from her fingers and handing it to him. The gift would ensure that his stroll would be a leisurely one, allowing them to stay several minutes more. The gendarme accepted the ring with a curt nod. Casting a dark look at Biddle, he continued on his way.
Tasia breathed a sigh of relief. She turned to Biddle with an apologetic smile. “I told him you were my lover. It was all I could think of.”
Biddle stared at her dazedly, unable to say a word.
“Are you all right?” she asked, puzzled by his silence. “Oh, Mr. Biddle…did I shock you terribly?”