Read His Lordship Possessed Online
Authors: Lynn Viehl
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Science Fiction, #Urban, #Steampunk
are impassible from the inside of the room. Even if you
could get at the locks, there is nothing you can use to
pick them.” He turned about one last time, studying my
prison. “It will have to be a possession, then.”
“A what?”
“Stay here.” He fl oated out through the door.
“Harry!” I went over and pounded on the door. “Come
back here.”
Th e door opened, but in came Connell, who
slammed the door behind him. I shuffl ed back, unsure
if I should try to dodge round him or kick him in the
unmentionables.
“You’ve been ill,” he told me as he walked right up
to me and studied my face. “You believe you’ve been
poisoned. Th ere’s blood coming from your lips.”
“What are you talking about? Th ere’s no bloo—”
My head snapped as he slapped me, hard enough to
make my ears hum.
“Now there is.” Connell handed me the container of
scented powder. “Toss this in the guard’s face. It will
blind and choke him long enough for you to get outside.
Th en lock him in.”
I stared at him. “Connell, why are you helping me?”
“Charm, it’s me, Harry.” For a moment I saw the old
man’s face appear atop Connell’s, like a half-transparent
mask. “I’ve taken
possession
of this man’s body.” He glanced down at himself. “Which isn’t all that bad.” He
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LYNN VIEHL
stretched out an arm. “Very strappy fellow.”
“Get out of there,” I almost shrieked.
“If I dispossess him now, he’ll regain his senses
immediately and spoil your escape.” Harry/Connell
patted my cheek. “Now remember, give the guard a good
dousing with that powder.”
“You’re possessing a guard, so why don’t you simply
walk me out of here?” I demanded.
“No time to explain that now,” my grandfather said.
“Th ere’s a guard in the front hall, and one repairing the
door you smashed in the kitchen. Once you get out of
here, go to the servant’s stairs and take the tradesmen’s
entrance out.”
“All right.” I gingerly tested the bleeding cut on the
inside of my lip before smearing the sides of my mouth
with the blood to make it look more convincing. “Once
I’m outside, then what?”
“You’ll fi nd three horses in the stables,” he told me.
“Saddle the black gelding with the white star on his nose.
Ride through the pasturelands, and don’t allow anyone to
see or stop you.”
I stirred the powder with a fi ngertip. “You’re certain
this will work?”
“I wasn’t a hoodlum, you silly twit. I was Houdini.”
He gave me an awkward, one-armed hug. “And your
lover will not remain in town forever, so you had best get
going.”
“
Former
lover.” I dragged some hair over my eyes and
went to stand by the door. “Did you become Houdini as
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a cover for the spying?”
“You mean you haven’t worked it out yet?” Incredibly,
he chuckled. “I possessed the body of a spy, Charm, and
used him as my cover. Being a spy concealed the fact that
I was, ah, Houdini.”
“Why would you have to hide that?” I demanded.
“From what I’ve read everyone adored him—you.”
“Everyone but your parents, and that story will have to
keep for another time. Wait.” He picked up my pendant
from the fl oor and set it on a table near me. “Count to
ten after I leave, put this on, and don’t take it off unless you need me.”
“Why?”
“Th ings have changed now that I’m . . . never mind.”
He opened the door and hurried out.
I slowly counted to ten before I put my pendant back
on, drew a deep breath, and then bowed over, concealing
the powder behind my arms. “Please . . . help me,” I
called out in a strangled, frightened voice. “I’m throwing
up . . . blood. I think I’ve been . . . poisoned . . .”
I had to keep that up for several minutes until the
brute who had brought me to the room from the garden
stepped in and scowled at me.
“What’s all this?” he demanded, peering at my face
and then straightening. “Where did you—?”
I hurled the scented powder in his face, shoving him
aside and darting past him through the door. As he
coughed, I slammed the door shut and engaged the locks.
He began immediately swearing at me and hammering
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LYNN VIEHL
on the door’s inside panel, but I didn’t linger to hear his
poor opinion of me. I ran down the hall to the servant’s
stairs then took them to the fi rst fl oor, where I stood in the shadows until I saw the guard there rushing upstairs.
Th en I ran round the corner and fl ed to the deliveries
door.
It refused to open at fi rst, but then the knob gave way
and I was outside. I scanned the grounds to look for other
guards and saw the coast was clear.
Bunching up my skirts and running across the lawn
put me in view of the house, but I felt sure I had another
minute or two before Powder-face and Dredmore’s
other hooligans came after me. I made it to the stables
and darted inside, stopping long enough to listen for a
moment and a glance out. Lamplight fl icked against the
side windows of the house, descending from the second
to the fi rst fl oor.
I turned and dashed to the stalls, where fi ve black
horses were watching me with some interest.
“All right, which one of you has a white star?” I went
to the center stalls, avoided a nip from a cranky-looking
mare with a white stripe, and then found the gelding, a
placid-eyed fellow who nuzzled my fi ngers looking for a
treat.
“Saves you for the ladies, does he?” I glanced at the
saddles hanging on the end wall before I took down a
bridle from a post peg and unlatched the stall door. Th e
gelding dipped his head as I bridled him, and only gave
me a mild look of surprise when I tossed a blanket over
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his back.
“Sorry, no time for anything else,” I told him, and
climbed up the side of the stall to swing onto him. Th e
only times I rode horseback were when I dressed as a
native male, so I was used to sitting astride. For his part
the gelding turned his head as if to inspect me. “For
God’s sake, just
pretend
I’m a man.”
I guided him out of the stall and rode him to the
double doors, where I reached up for the latch pull.
Dredmore had installed a mechanized opener, the wheels
of which whirred as four telescoping bars pushed open
the big doors. Th rough them I saw the indistinct shapes
of two men halfway between the stables and the house.
“Now, let’s make a run for it.” I thumped my heels
into the gelding’s sides, and he trotted out with a sedate,
fastidious trot. “I said
run
, my lad, not
mince
.”
After two more insistent thumps, the gelding
reluctantly stretched his legs and galloped across the lawn
away from the manor and across the clearing that led to
the cliff s.
I reined in the gelding when I reached a grove of
cypress and took cover there to watch for Dredmore’s
men. When the horse became restless, I stroked his
neck. “I know, George, fi rst time you get a decent rider
and now you have to wait. You don’t mind if I call you
George, do you? You look like a George.”
George snorted and dropped his head to crop some
grass.
I rode horseback often enough not to be sore, but one
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LYNN VIEHL
already tender portion of my anatomy made me acutely
aware not only of how daft I’d been, but why women
were rarely seen in public the day after their weddings.
“I’ll wager
he
isn’t suff ering,” I muttered to the gelding as I watched several men riding Dredmore’s other
horses gallop past. “I imagine he’s swaggering about and
bragging of his conquest and feeling quite the master of
al he surveys. I should have set fi re to that damned hovel of his before I escaped.”
Once the posse had disappeared over the next hill,
George and I came out of the cypress and went in the
opposite direction, toward the fi rst spread of pasturelands that surrounded the city. Th e gelding perked up as soon
as we were in the clear, and I eased off the reins to let him have his head.
“Go on,” I said as he went into that mincing trot
again. “Th is is probably the only chance you’ll ever have
to really run.”
George seemed to understand me and took off in
a long, elegant lope that gradually increased in speed
until we were fairly fl ying across the pastures. I glanced
back now and then, but no one appeared behind us.
Dredmore’s men were too accustomed to dealing with
ladies, I imagined.
I stopped the gelding twice: once to water him at a
spring-fed trough in a cow pasture, and the second time
just within sight of the city’s streets. George had proven
himself a worthy steed, so I abandoned my initial plan
to turn him loose outside Rumsen and instead rode him
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through the back alleys to Halter’s, a small stable near my
fl at that I often frequented.
A few minutes after I rang the service bell, John Halter
came out of the barn in his shirtsleeves, his penders still
hanging round his hips. “We don’t open ‘til dawn, so you
can . . . sod me, Miss Kit? Th at you?”
“No, John, it’s not me.” I handed him the reins and
dismounted. “It’s just George here. Say hello to my mate
John Halter, George.”
Th e gelding blew out some air.
“Morning, George.” John gave his neck a few gentle
slaps. “So why is this big fellow getting me up out of bed
before I’ve had m’tea?”
“Last night George wandered away from home and
has since become lost,” I said. “You can tell by the sadness in his eyes.”
“Bugger looks right happy to me.” Th e stablemaster
frowned. “Where’s George’s home, then?”
“Th at would be Morehaven.”
John swore softly.
“I’ve watered and rested him. He’ll need a rub and
some feed, and his master will pay you when he comes
to collect him.” I hesitated. “He’ll likely have some
questions, John.”
“Th en I’ll let George answer what he can.” John
sighed. “You’re not here, Miss Kit. Best you go on home.”
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From John Halter’s I did go home, arriving at my door
a few minutes before sunrise. I scowled at the row of
wardlings nailed above the entry before I went inside and
bolted the door behind me.
Glancing down, I saw how my night’s adventures had
reduced Bridget’s beautiful gown to little more than a
bundle of dirty rags. I stank of horse sweat and my own
sweat, and something else.
Beneath it all, I smelled of Dredmore.
I was distracted from my dark thoughts by looking
at my bare forearm. Dredmore’s men hadn’t found my
pendant but had relieved me of all my other, borrowed
jewels before locking me up; hopefully Bridget’s husband
could use his infl uence to get them back because I could
never aff ord to replace them. A suspicious little trickle
between my legs made me crane my head round, and I
saw spots of blood on the back of my skirt.
Reminders of more things that could never be taken
back.
I ran to my bath, tearing off the gown before I grabbed
my sponge and stepped into the tub. Th e cascade doused
me in frigid water as I scrubbed myself all over, washing
away the sweat and the blood, the dirt and the tears.
And Dredmore.
After ridding myself of all the unwanted reminders of
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the night before (as well as a layer or two of my skin) I
dried my hair and dressed, ignoring the siren song of my
sympathetic bed. I’d triumphed over a tragedy of my own
manufacture; my life would go on. My monthlies had
just fi nished, so chances were that I would not become
pregnant. If anything I could be grateful to Dredmore for
smashing the last of my romantic notions.
Men and romance, two notions I fully intended to
avoid in the future like the rats and plague they were.
When I arrived at the Davies Building, Horace Eduwin
Gremley the Fourth stood hovering just outside the
main entry. He rushed over as soon as he saw me turn
the corner.
“Mr. Gremley.” I bobbed. “You’re in early today.
Making up some hours to allow for an early day on
Friday?”
“No. Yes. Ah, Miss Kittredge.” His eyes darted
back before returning to gaze at me with a kind of wild