Late for the Wedding (19 page)

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Authors: Amanda Quick

BOOK: Late for the Wedding
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“He put a pistol to his head.”

Aspasia’s mouth twisted. “They say it is a gentleman’s way out. I suppose that it is, indeed, a better end than the gallows.”

It was all so dreadfully tragic, Lavinia thought. After years of shielding herself from the pain men had caused her, Aspasia had fallen for a cold-blooded murderer.

“My condolences on your loss,” Lavinia said eventually.

“Forgive me.” Aspasia blinked away the moisture that glittered in her eyes. “I just wanted you to know that Tobias is quite safe from me. Even if I did think to seduce him, it would not be possible. It is obvious that he loves you. As for me, I will never take the risk of giving my heart to any man again.”

Lavinia could think of nothing to say to that, so she held her tongue.

“Good day, Lavinia. I wish you joy with Tobias. He is a fine man. I envy you, but not even for him would I trade places with you.”

Aspasia turned and walked swiftly away along the path. Lavinia watched her go out through the iron gates that guarded the entrance to the cemetery.

She stood alone at Zachary Elland’s grave for a time and thought about the twists and turns of fate.

“You certainly did a great deal of damage while you were walking around up here,” she whispered. “Who could possibly have admired you so much that he would wish to emulate you?”

The dead leaves danced a ghostly waltz across the grass.

Chapter 19

Smiling Jack waited for him in the alley behind the Gryphon, his massive bulk silhouetted in the rear entrance of the tavern. He was barking orders at two men who were in the process of unloading several large shipping casks from a cart.

“Have a care with that French brandy,” Jack snapped at one of the men. “Cost me a bloody fortune.”

Tobias walked down the alley and came to a halt beside Jack. He studied the casks.

“Brandy, Jack? Isn’t that a bit elegant for the Gryphon? I was under the impression that your clientele prefers ale and gin.”

Jack chuckled, drawing the ghastly scar that ran from his mouth to his ear into a death's-head grin. “Aye. This is for my own personal use.”

Tobias studied the large casks. “That’s a great deal of brandy for one man to drink.”

“I have a lot of guests.” Jack clapped him on the back. “Take yourself, for instance. I like to be able to entertain gentlemen such as yourself in the manner to which you have become accustomed.”

“Speaking for myself, I appreciate that sentiment,” Tobias said.

He rarely came to the Gryphon during the day. He preferred the cover of night for his visits with Jack. But the boy’s message had sounded urgent, so he had taken extra precautions to conceal his identity. Before making his way to this part of town he had taken the time to put on the work-worn clothes and heavy boots of a dockside laborer. In spite of the warmth of the day, he had added a voluminous, high-collared coat and an oversize wide-brimmed hat that was angled to conceal his features. In addition, he had used the alley entrance deliberately so as to avoid the front room of the tavern.

“I got your message,” he said, keeping his voice very soft so that his educated accents would not be overheard by the workers unloading the cart. “What news do you have for me?”

“It’s only a rumor.” Jack, too, pitched his voice to a low tone. “No way to confirm it yet. But it was as nasty a bit of gossip as I’ve heard in a while, and I thought you’d better know about it as soon as possible.”

“Go on.”

“There’s word going around that a young footpad who goes by the name of Sweet Ned has taken a commission.”

“What sort of commission?”

“Can’t say.” Jack watched him with grim eyes. “My source did not know exactly why Sweet Ned was employed. Something to do with following a particular person about, he believes. I doubt that he’ll be offering to assist the lady across the street.”

Tobias went still. “What lady would that be?”

“Yours.”

After a while Lavinia turned away from Elland’s grave and went back along the path to the iron gates.

The narrow lane that bordered the graveyard was quiet and empty of traffic and passersby. The only person about was a young man who looked like a laborer or a stable lad. He was garbed in a worn, ill-fitting mud-colored coat and battered boots. His cap was pulled down low over his eyes.

There was something feral and hungry-looking about him. He made her think of the cats that survived by preying on rats and mice in alleys and warehouses. He was propped in the heavily shadowed doorway of a shuttered building at the open end of the lane.

The cap and the slouch were disturbingly familiar, she thought. Her stomach knotted with sudden tension. This was not the first time that she had seen the man today. She was almost certain that she had caught a glimpse of him earlier when she left Claremont Lane. She could have sworn that he had been loitering in the little park at the end of the street.

The fine hairs on the nape of her neck lifted. Her palms went icy cold.

She glanced toward the opposite end of the lane, thinking to leave by that route. But that was impossible. The narrow passage ended at a stone wall.

The man in the cap noticed her hovering between the gates. He straightened indolently and reached into his pocket. Slowly, tauntingly, he withdrew his hand.

Light glittered on the blade of the knife.

The only thing she could do was retreat back into the graveyard, but the surrounding walls and locked church door made it a trap.

The man in the cap started toward her, sauntering as though he had all the time in the world.

She took a step back into the graveyard.

He smiled, evidently pleased by her small show of anxiety.

She had no choice. She whirled and fled back into the cemetery.

Mrs. Chilton wiped her hands on her apron. “Mrs. Lake said something about going out to a little cemetery in Benbow Lane. Said it was just off Wintergrove Street near a park. Mrs. Gray sent a message asking her to meet there.”

“How long ago did she leave?” Tobias asked.

Mrs. Chilton glanced at the clock. “Going on an hour, I believe.” She frowned. “Is something wrong, sir?”

“Yes.”

Tobias went back down the steps. He did not bother to hunt for a hackney. He knew the cemetery well. It was not far away, but it was surrounded by a maze of tiny lanes and narrow streets. He would make better time on foot.

Chapter 20

Sweet Ned took a deep breath and sauntered toward the gates of the graveyard. He wanted to handle this business in a professional manner.

Business.
He liked the sound of that. He’d taken a real
commission
from a real
client
. He was no longer an ordinary street lad who picked pockets and snatched the odd valuable. As of last night, he was a professional with his own business.

When he’d struck the bargain with the woman, it was as though a magic door had opened, allowing him a tantalizing vision of a new future. It was a truly dazzling scene in which he was the master of his own destiny, successful and prosperous. Respected.

There would be no more dealing with the damned receivers who never gave fair value for the goods he risked his neck to steal. No more skulking about in alleys waiting to rob drunken gentlemen when they stumbled out of the hells and brothels in the wee hours of the morning. No more dodging the Runners. From now on he would only accept
commissions
from
clients
who were willing to pay well to have their dirty work done by an
expert
.

He’d have to consider how best to advertise his services, he thought as he strolled through the iron gates. Unfortunately, he could not put a notice in the papers. He would have to depend on word of mouth. But that should not be a problem after the news of how well he had carried out his first commission circulated. The woman would likely tell her friends and they would tell others, and in no time at all he would be swamped with commissions.

Too bad his pa had drunk himself to death before he’d had an opportunity to see his son move up in the world.

At the thought of his father lying dead in the stinking alley, a half-empty bottle of gin in one hand, the old rage came back, nearly blinding him. Memories of the beatings made him clench his hand around the handle of the knife. They had grown more frequent and more savage after his ma died. In the end he’d had no choice but to take to the streets.

There were times when the urge to hit someone or something nearly overpowered him. Sometimes he wanted to strike blow after blow until this rush of raw fury evaporated.

But he refused to give in to the fierce anger. He had vowed to himself a long time ago that he would not follow in his father’s drunken footsteps. After today everything would be different. After today word would go out that he was a reliable professional and he would be launched on his new career.

But first he had to fulfill this commission.

He stopped just inside the cemetery gates, trying to ignore the little finger of dread that touched him at the back of his neck. He did not like graveyards. One of his friends, who was doing very nicely for himself robbing graves and selling bodies to the medical schools, had tried to convince him to join his gang of Resurrection Men. He had made some excuse about having bigger plans, but the truth was, he knew he’d never be a success in that line of work. The thought of digging up graves and opening coffins filled him with horror.

He looked quickly around the graveyard, searching for his quarry. Panic surged in his vitals when he realized that she was nowhere in sight.

Impossible. She had to be here somewhere. He knew this old boneyard. She could not have climbed the high stone walls, and the gates behind him were the only way out. The small church had been closed up for nearly a year, the door kept locked and barred.

The burial vaults, he thought. She must be hiding in one of them. Yes, that was it. She had realized that he was a threat, and the poor little fool had sought refuge in one of the large crypts. As if he’d let her slip away so easily.

He studied the array of stone vaults sprinkled around the cemetery. Some of them were enormous, built to house several generations of a family’s dead. A small scrap of cloth fluttered on the ground in front of the door of a large crypt on his right.

It looked like a lady’s handkerchief.

She was no doubt shivering in terror inside that dark chamber, alone with all those walled-up skeletons, he thought. He felt a pang of sympathy. He wouldn’t want to be in her shoes. But if she was already trembling with fear, that would make his work all the easier.

At the door of the monument he stooped down to pick up the little bit of embroidered cloth. Just as he’d thought. A fine linen handkerchief. When this was finished he would give it to Jenny.

He opened the door of the crypt and peered into the gloom. A shudder went through him. This would not have been his choice of a hiding place.

“You in there,” he called. “Come on out now. I’ve got a message for ye.”

His voice echoed on the stone walls, but nothing stirred inside the crypt. He wondered if she’d fainted dead away from fright.

“Bloody female. You had to go and make this difficult, didn’t you?”

There was no help for it; he’d have to go in and haul her out. He wished he had a candle or a lantern. It was as dark as the Pit in there.

Reluctantly, he moved into the burial vault. The passageway at the entrance opened onto a cramped chamber, lined floor to ceiling with stones engraved with the names of the dead. There was just enough light to make out the edges of two massive, heavily carved coffins in the center of the room. She was no doubt crouched down behind one of them.

He eased deeper into the chamber. Decades of dust stirred at his feet.

Dust.

Belatedly, he glanced down. There was enough light slanting through the open door to see that there were no footprints in the thick dust other than his own.

“Bloody hell.”

He whirled and raced back toward the door. He got there just in time to catch a glimpse of the woman’s green skirts flying out through the cemetery gates.

She’d tricked him. She had dropped her handkerchief in front of this monument and hidden behind one of the others.

He rushed toward the gates. He could outrun her, he promised himself, a sense of desperation pouring through him. He could outrun any fine lady.

He
had
to outrun her. His future depended on it.

Lavinia fled toward the entrance of the tiny lane, her skirts clutched in both hands. She could hear the man pounding across the graveyard. He would be through the gates in another few seconds. He was young and strong and fast, and she knew that she could not outrun him for long. Her only hope was to reach the street first and pray that there would be other people around to aid her.

This was, she reflected, one of those times when it would have been extremely helpful to be dressed in trousers instead of a gown. If she escaped the man with the knife, she would definitely make an appointment with Madam Francesca to discuss the matter.

The thud of boots on stone drew closer. She sensed the man reaching for her. She did not dare look back. The place where the lane met the street was not far now.

Dear God, two more strides and she would be safe. Perhaps.

She burst out of the tiny mouth of the lane.

And stumbled straight into the arms of a solidly built man in a large, dark coat and a low-crowned hat. Her first thought was that the villain with the knife had a companion. A fresh wave of fear crashed through her.

She struggled to break free, opening her mouth to scream.

“Lavinia.” Tobias’s strong hands closed around her forearms like steel manacles. “Are you all right? Answer me, Lavinia. Are you hurt?”

“Tobias.”
Relief left her limp and breathless. “Thank God. Yes, yes, I’m all right. But there’s a man. With a knife.”

She swung around and saw that her pursuer had stopped just inside the entrance to the lane. He stared at Tobias.

“There he is,” Lavinia said. “I think he followed me here. He waited for Aspasia to leave and then he came toward me with a knife and I—”

“Stay here.” He set her aside and started toward the young man with the blade.

She realized that he was going to try to capture her would-be assailant.

“Tobias, no. Wait. He’s got a knife.”

“He will not have it for long,” Tobias said very softly. He kept moving, swiftly narrowing the distance between himself and the man in the lane.

Lavinia saw panic cross the young man’s face. Whatever he saw in Tobias’s expression had struck terror in him. He was trapped and he knew it.

Alarm swept through her. Cornered creatures were exceedingly dangerous.

Tobias did not seem to notice the knife in the young man’s hand. He closed in on him with the long, prowling stride of a wolf moving in for the kill.

The man lost his nerve. Blade extended as though it were a talisman that could ward off a demon, he broke into a mad run, slashing wildly at the air. It was clear that he intended to try to rush past Tobias to the freedom of the street.

Tobias sidestepped the knife and grabbed the arm that held it as the villain went flying past him. Using the man’s own momentum, he swung him in an arc that ended abruptly against the nearest stone wall.

The assailant squealed in fear and rage and pain. He crumpled to the pavement. The knife clattered on the stones.

Tobias scooped up the blade. “Sweet Ned, I presume.”

The young man shuddered as if he’d been struck.

Lavinia hurried toward the pair. “How do you come to know his name?”

“I’ll explain later.” Tobias kept his attention focused entirely on Sweet Ned. “Look at me, Ned. I want to see your face.”

Lavinia stiffened at the deadly edge on Tobias’s softly spoken order. Uncertain of his temper, she shot another quick, searching glance at him. Beneath the brim of his hat, his features were as hard and unyielding as the face of one of the stone angels in the graveyard.

Another tremor went through Sweet Ned, and Lavinia knew that he, too, had heard the promise of doom in Tobias’s voice. But as though compelled by instructions received from a powerful mesmerist, he slowly rolled onto his back. He stared up at Tobias.

For the first time Lavinia got a close look at his face.

“He’s so young,” she whispered. “He’s not even as old as Anthony or Dominic. Seventeen or eighteen at most.”

“And given his choice of profession, he’ll likely hang before he’s another year older.” Tobias stood just out of Ned’s reach and watched his victim with no sign of sympathy. “What did you intend here today, Ned?”

Ned jerked a little at the question. It was as though he had received a shock from the words.

“I never meant to hurt the lady,” he gasped. “I swear it on my mother’s grave. I was only going to put a scare into her, that’s all.”

“What sort of scare?” Tobias asked, lowering his voice a bit more.

Ned was clearly terrified now. “I . . . I was to tell her to stop asking questions, that’s all.”

“Questions?” The information shook Lavinia. Until that moment she had assumed that Ned was no more than a common footpad who had singled her out as a woman alone and therefore an easy victim.

Tobias, however, did not appear surprised by the answer.

“What sort of questions was the lady not supposed to ask?” he said to Ned.

“I don’t know what sort. I took a commission, ye see. The lady paid me, half before, the rest to follow.”

“Lady?” Lavinia moved a little closer.

“Describe this woman who hired you,” Tobias said evenly. “If you value your life, you will give me every single detail that you can recall.”

“I don’t . . . I don’t . . . I can’t think . . .” Ned’s features tightened in terror. He was clearly struggling hard to remember, but his fear of Tobias had tangled his tongue.

This approach would gain them nothing, Lavinia thought. She reached up and unclasped the silver medallion she wore around her throat.

“I suggest that you allow me to question him, sir,” she said quietly to Tobias.

Tobias glanced at the medallion, hesitated, and then gave a small shrug. “Very well. I want to know everything there is to know about the person who hired him to frighten you.”

“Sweet Ned, look at me,” she said gently.

But Ned appeared unable to drag his gaze away from Tobias. He was riveted by whatever it was he saw in the other man’s eyes.

“Look away from him, Tobias,” Lavinia said quietly. “He is transfixed by you. You must release him before I can deal with him.”

“I’m watching him.” Tobias did not take his eyes off Ned. “I don’t want any surprises.”

“For heaven’s sake, you’ve got him in a sort of trance,” she muttered. “You must break it. He can’t. Look away for a few seconds. I think that will do it.”

“What the devil are you talking about? He’s not in a trance. He’s terrified, that’s all.” Tobias smiled coldly at Ned. “And with very good reason.”

Ned did not move. He did not even blink. He lay there on the ground staring at Tobias.

“Tobias, please,” Lavinia said, a little desperate now.

“Very well.” Tobias took his attention off Ned and looked at her instead. “But if this does not work, I’ll take charge. Is that understood?”

She glanced quickly at him, saw what Ned must have seen, and stopped breathing. Tobias’s eyes were fathomless seas of a roiling silvery-gray mist. The world around her began to dissolve. She lost her balance and started to fall headfirst into a bottomless, dark whirlpool.

“Lavinia.” Tobias’s voice cracked like lightning. “What’s wrong? You look as if you’re going to faint.”

She snapped out of the trance and found her balance with an act of will. “Rubbish.” She drew a deep breath. “I’ll have you know I have never fainted in my entire life.”

Hastily, she turned back toward Ned, who was propped on his elbows, shaking his head as though trying to clear it. At least he was no longer helplessly transfixed by Tobias.

She summoned her wits and pulled herself together. “Ned. Look at my necklace.” She held the silver pendant so that it caught the sunlight. “See how it sparkles.”

Ned’s gaze snagged on the dangling medallion. She let it swing gently.

“Watch the pattern of the dancing light, Ned,” she said in the firm, compelling voice she employed to induce a mesmeric trance. “It will calm your mind and steady your nerves. Your fears will be soothed. Concentrate on the dancing light. Feel the heaviness in your limbs. Listen to my voice. Listen only to my voice. Let everything else fade into the distance, where it cannot make you anxious.”

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