Read Bees in the Butterfly Garden Online
Authors: Maureen Lang
Tags: #FICTION / Christian / Romance, #FICTION / Romance / Historical
23
There’s rules inside the Tombs and there’s rules outside. Neither set got nothin’ to do with the law.
Maisie “Mad Doll” McCready
Incarcerated for pickpocketing
Code of Thieves
Roscoe’s whimper alerted Ian to someone at the door before the first knock. Given the dog’s wagging tail, it was likely someone they both knew. Still, he was cautious—only Pubjug knew Ian was staying in this gimcrack hotel, and for the time being he didn’t want company.
“Ian, open the door.”
Particularly not Kate’s.
For the merest second he considered not answering. Let her think Roscoe was here alone, since there was no hiding his scratch and cry. There was only one reason for Kate’s arrival—to remind Ian of what he already knew.
“It’s too early in the day for a polite visit, Kate,” Ian said, opening the door to face her despite his reluctance. Delaying the inevitable rarely served him. “So I’m assuming there will be nothing polite about it.”
She walked past him into the room, her face somber. “I came for your own sake, Ian. Keys just told me to stay away from you for a few days. You know what that means.”
Too well. Ian brushed his chin with the back of his hand, considering the warning in Kate’s words. Brewster liked to isolate his prey and avoid much damage spilling onto others. Resent Kate though he might, Ian knew Brewster thought enough of John’s memory to want her spared any unpleasantness.
Brewster had no doubt heard about the bank fiasco, and the natural conclusion would be the truth: Ian needed Meg now—and what she could bring to him. If they were going to work together, Brewster wanted to make sure he wasn’t cut out.
“If you use Meg to get to that gold,” Kate said, proving she’d figured out the situation too, “you’ll shred the memory of friendship with John that you claimed so important.”
Ian should lie to her, assure Kate he wasn’t taking that next step, no matter the truth. He
did
need Meg if he wanted the biggest heist of his career. But when he turned away from Kate’s accusing face, unable to hide what he intended, something filled him that he hadn’t felt in years—or if he had, he hadn’t given the room to acknowledge it. Shame.
“Oh, Ian,” she whispered, coming up behind him and putting a hand on his shoulder. A hand he wanted to shrug away but forced himself to endure. “You wouldn’t do this to John’s daughter, would you?”
“It’s me or Brewster, Kate. Meg won’t have it any other way.”
“Then it’s your job to
find
another way.” She came around and looked at him earnestly. “And you know it.”
Kate walked back to the door, adding quietly that she would do all she could to protect Meg. “If you know what’s best for you,” she added, “you’ll leave the city right now, before Brewster’s man shows up for you. I’ll pray you do the right thing.”
Then she left.
Ian looked at the closed door. To his own amazement, it was the first time one of her promises of prayer didn’t fill him with anger. If Brewster was concocting a plan to inspire the kind of fear he used in his favor, then Ian needed all the interference he could find. Heavenly or otherwise.
With so many of the city’s elite away for the eight-week summer season, morning calls to or from the Pembertons had been rare. Even Mrs. Mason, who had reminded Claire at the dinner party some weeks ago that she was happy to fill in for Claire’s absent parents, had visited only twice. So when a card embellished with a simple, single flower and the name Lady Kate Weathersfield was delivered to Meg, Meg’s surprise that she had a visitor couldn’t have been more sincere.
“A friend?” Claire asked after Meg’s gasp no doubt drew her attention.
They were in the parlor waiting for Evie for their daily trip to the park. Until this moment, Meg had been eager to go. But perhaps the park wasn’t the best place to find Ian because of its vast size. Despite the unfamiliar last name, Lady Kate could only mean one person—someone most definitely connected to Ian.
Meg wasn’t entirely sure how to answer Claire’s inquiry. “Yes. . . .” She stood, ready to receive the caller just as soon as the maid could lead her into the room. “This is a most unexpected visit, and I know you only receive callers on Tuesdays, Claire. But I’d like to see her.”
Needed
to see her was more truthful, even as fear over the reason for Kate’s visit started to take shape.
Claire hardly looked rattled. “Of course! How would a friend of yours know the Pemberton schedule? Please have her come in, and I’ll gladly delay our visit to the park if you like.”
Meg was about to insist Claire keep to her schedule and go to the park anyway, but there was Kate, so astonishing a sight in the Pemberton parlor that Meg forgot what she’d been about to say.
“How good of you to see me,” Kate said as she swept into the room. She was lovelier than ever in a princess-line tea gown of crisp red floral damask, topped by a bonnet of lace and ribbon over tightly woven black straw. She held out her lace-gloved hand, while a small beaded reticule hung from her wrist. “I’ve only just arrived back in New York but simply couldn’t wait another moment to see you, Meg!”
Meg let Kate take both of her hands. What was she to say? Because no doubt every word pouring from Kate’s mouth was a lie—polished and prettied with an entirely phony English accent.
“It’s very nice to see you . . . Lady Kate.”
Kate turned to Claire, but only partially so. She kept one hand on Meg’s but held the other out to Claire.
“Do permit me to introduce myself, won’t you, darling? I’m Lady Kate Weathersfield, originally of London but lately of Baltimore and visiting New York, where I knew this lovely child’s father, John Davenport, simply years and years ago. When I learned through Meg’s school that she would be spending the summer with the Pembertons, I ventured out without a single companion, I was so eager to see her. But do tell me—Claire, is it?—could you be related to Henshall Pemberton? The first Pemberton I thought of was dear, dear Henshall!”
“I’m afraid I’m not acquainted with a Henshall Pemberton. My father is Arthur. He does have a brother, but he’s in Chicago. Hugh Pemberton?”
Kate—Lady Kate—waved away the lack of connection, and Meg watched as she so masterfully demonstrated how to be a confident and sophisticated liar. Meg almost believed the exhibition herself.
“Oh, never mind, then, darling.” She dropped Claire’s hand to replace her own atop Meg’s. “But it’s so lovely to see you! I’ll be staying in the city for a while and would love to spend time with you. Shall we make a date for a dinner? Or something rather longer than that? How about an excursion! Oh yes, you simply must visit me for a picnic. We have so much to talk about! How fortunate that you’re not away at that school for the summer or off to Newport like many of my other city friends.”
“We can visit now for a while,” Meg suggested. Evie entered the parlor just then, a look of curiosity on her face as she took in Kate. Meg looked at Claire. “Perhaps you and Evie might go on to the park as scheduled, and I’ll stay behind.”
“And who is this lovely child?” Kate exclaimed upon seeing Evie. “But you must be a Pemberton! You’ve your sister’s eyes, only in green.”
Evie’s brows rose. “I never thought Claire and I resembled one another.”
“Of course you do! You have only to grow into the look a bit. In a few years you’ll be every bit as captivating, just wait and see. Beauty can be learned, of course, but you’ve been given it naturally. True beauty.”
Evie’s smile almost proved Kate’s words to be true. For the moment she possessed a look of near serenity, making the beauty Kate predicted seem a reality. But Meg knew Evie too well to believe it for long.
“Perhaps we all ought to go—or stay,” Evie suggested.
But Claire was already pulling her sister along. “It was very nice to meet you, Lady Weathersfield. I hope we get to see you again. But we’ll leave you with Meg for a visit so the two of you can do a little reacquainting.”
“Thank you ever so much, darling!” Kate called after them.
No sooner had the sound of a closing door echoed through the parlor than Meg opened her mouth to speak. But nothing came out.
Kate put a finger atop Meg’s lips. “Don’t waste time,” she whispered. “Is there somewhere we can speak—where you’re sure we won’t be overheard?”
Meg thought a moment, then nodded. “The garden.”
She led Kate from the parlor, refusing an offer of tea when a servant met them in the foyer. It was too early for tea anyway, and she didn’t want the interruption of its delivery.
Meg closed the doors once they were outside, for a moment seeing the garden as Kate might see it. Nearly untouched, making her effort toward improving it so scant as to be embarrassing.
But Kate didn’t appear interested in their surroundings. She faced Meg, clutching her reticule as if she needed it to steady herself. “I came to talk sense into you.”
“I already know you never wanted me here, so why this pressing visit all of a sudden?”
One of Kate’s hands lifted from the reticule to curl into a small, tight fist, which she pushed against her lips as if to stifle what she’d been about to say.
Her obvious worry renewed the fear inside Meg. “Tell me, Kate. Has something happened? To Ian? Because of how the bank job turned out?”
“Not yet.”
“What do you mean? Is he going to be arrested?”
Kate uttered what might have been a laugh, but it was choked into a moan. “If only it were that easy. No. It’s Brewster. He sees Ian as a wounded pup. Now is the time to either convince him of his place or be rid of him altogether. He knows Ian will work with you now.”
Meg wanted to swallow but found she couldn’t. Her throat had turned to stone. “What does that mean? Be rid of him?”
“Oh, he won’t kill him—if nothing goes wrong. But he’ll scare him enough to hope he leaves town for other territory. Unless he agrees to cooperate with Brewster.”
Meg turned on her heel back toward the door, only to be caught in Kate’s firm grip on her arm. She tried breaking free, but Kate held tight.
“We’ve got to stop him, Kate! Come with me or not, but I won’t stand by and let this happen. I’ll see Brewster myself, and—”
“And what?” Her fingers dug into Meg’s skin. “Do you think your words will stop Brewster from doing as he pleases? This is exactly why your father never wanted you to know the kind of life he lived!”
Meg stared at Kate as words Brewster had spoken to her came back in stark detail. “He warned me, Kate, only I didn’t know what it was.”
“Who warned you? When?”
“Brewster, at a charity ball. He said he had a way to convince Ian to work with him. This must be what he meant.” She tugged on the arm Kate still gripped. “Now let me go.”
Kate loosened but did not give up her hold on Meg. “Even if you’d known it was a warning, it wouldn’t have made any difference. Brewster would still go through with whatever he has in mind, and what do you think Ian would do? Leave town? Leave you to Brewster? Do you think he’s going to be scared off?”
Meg shrugged out of Kate’s grasp and left the garden without looking back. She wound her way through the Pemberton home and out the front door without stopping for her hat and gloves or to let anyone know she was leaving. The coach Kate must have arrived in waited at the curb. Meg jumped inside, calling to the driver the name of the St. Denis Hotel.
Kate barely had time to join her before the carriage rolled down the street.
Ian could have waited in his rented hotel room. Or he could have tried hiding, and in a city as vast as New York, he might have succeeded, at least for a while. He might even have caught a train back to Peekskill with the faint hope that would be enough to show capitulation. Let Brewster have Meg because Ian stepped out of the picture.
But he did none of that. He knew he would have to get this over with, this next step toward independence. He only hoped nothing went wrong. Brewster’s thugs weren’t among the most careful when it came to enforcing an order of intimidation.
He went to a nearby bar with the idea of administering some anesthesia but thought better of it after a single drink. There was no sense in leaving himself utterly vulnerable. He’d need a bit of wit if he hoped to defend himself—and could at least look forward to the anesthesia once it was over.