A Duke For All Seasons (18 page)

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Authors: Mia Marlowe

BOOK: A Duke For All Seasons
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“Do we not all have the same length days, the same . . . heartbeats while we . . . live?”

    
Quinn was encouraged that Padmaa, an expert in the sensual arts, seemed to struggle with control as well.

    
“Yes, but we Englishmen divide our days up into nice, practical little hours and minutes.” When Quinn first arrived in India, he’d railed at the Asiatic disregard for punctuality. Since then he’d realized there were times when the eternal ‘now’ could not be regimented into a western schedule.

    
“No, I think it is because most Englishmen seek only their own satisfaction, not ways to please . . . their . . . women . . . oh!” Her dark eyes rolled back into her head and her body stiffened in preparation for release.

    
As she came in shimmering waves, Quinn glowed with reflected pleasure. It made a man achingly alive to bring a woman to such a peak.

    
And he was sure she’d demonstrate her gratitude by returning the favor just as soon as she stopped convulsing.
 

    
There was a soft rap on the door. Quinn cursed under his breath. Padmaa rose shakily from their bed of cushions and wrapped a length of silk around her body. “Come.”

    
“That was my plan,” Quinn muttered. Pleasing a woman was all well and good, but a man had needs too.

    
It was Sanjay at the door, so Quinn rose to his feet.

    
“A thousand pardons, my friend.” No one would suspect the man in threadbare leggings and tunic was the Crown Prince of Amjerat, but Quinn had accompanied Sanjay on several incognito adventures whenever his friend evaded his guards and slipped out of the palace. This was the first time Sanjay had interrupted Quinn’s visit to Padmaa. “There is trouble at the temple.”

    
“What kind of trouble?”

    
“A Thugee band entered the outer court,” Sanjay said. “Already they have killed one of the priests.”

    
Not all devotees of the destroyer goddess Kali practiced ritual murder, but Quinn had heard a group of Thugee were traveling south on the Grand Trunk Road, leaving offerings to their goddess all along the way. Quinn usually practiced tolerance when it came to the beliefs of others, but garroted corpses left a particularly unsavory trail of breadcrumbs. Each kill was considered an act of
pujah
, a veneration of Kali.

    
The British had attempted to quash the cult, but obviously some persisted. Now that this new band had reached Amjerat, Quinn could act against them.

    
He kissed Padmaa’s cheek. “My apologies. I must go.”

    
“Then your training is complete.” Her musical voice was tinged with regret. “To give bliss without thought of receiving is the goal of the enlightened soul.”

    
“I’m not all that enlightened.” Quinn growled in frustration as he shoved his Beaumont-Adams revolver into his belt. “Believe me, I bloody well thought about it.”

*
   
*
   
*
   
*
   
*

 

    
At a brisk trot, Quinn followed the prince into the sultry night and down a narrow alley toward the imposing temple in the center of Amjerat’s capital. They approached the temple’s side door in case the Thugs had posted a guard out front.

    
“What do they want in the temple?” Quinn whispered as he and Sanjay drew near. Most victims of thuggery were caught stumbling home from the local opium den, too wrapped in their lotus-eating haze to put up much of a fight.

    
“I fear it is
Baaghh kaa kkhuun.”

    
“Blood of the Tiger?” Quinn translated for himself as he ran toward the small side door.

    
Sanjay followed. “Oah, yes. It is the red diamond that makes up the eye in our Shiva. It is said to contain immense power. In the wrong hands, the energy of
Baaghh kaa kkhuun
turns to evil.”

    
“Then let’s make sure it stays in the right hands, shall we?” Quinn drew his revolver, wishing he’d reloaded after target practice that afternoon. He’d been in too much of a hurry to get to Padmaa. Now he only had four shots instead of twelve.

    
Quinn kicked open the door and bellowed at the gang to stop. When one was outnumbered, a bit of bravado rarely went amiss.

    
This time, it only served to put the gang on alert. The Thug perched on two of the four arms of the massive statue at the far end of the temple tossed them a glance and continued prying out the eye of the god with a wicked-looking dagger.

    
Quinn raised his pistol and dropped four Thugs as they ran toward him and the prince, their long, curved swords glittering. He considered trying for the one clinging to Shiva, but the other four were closer. Besides, Prince Sanjay would take it badly if Quinn accidently put a bullet through his god.

    
As it was, he and the prince had to stand back to back, slicing away with their swords to fight off the rest of the masked gang. Blades arcing, Quinn and Sanjay turned in concert, a stylized dance of death. None who came within their reach escaped without at least one cut.

    
It never failed to astound Quinn how battle heightened a man’s senses. He noted a hairy mole dividing the eyebrow of one of his attackers. The pungent smell of fenugreek and curry emanating from their flowing robes. The strident scream when Quinn’s blade opened a vein and a fountain of red spurted into the air.

    
Quinn counted ten of them. He and his friend were both expert swordsmen, but all it would take was one lucky thrust from their attackers. If either of them went down, they were both dead.

    
Then the thugee defacing the god screeched out a high ululation. At the sound, the remaining band turned and ran after the man who had the red diamond clutched in a square of black silk.

    
Quinn and Sanjay gave chase, but soon lost them in the tangled rabbit warrens of the bazaar.
Baaghh kaa kkhuun
disappeared like a gob of spit into the Ganges.
The red diamond left no
trace as it descended into the rotting heart of Amjerat’s underworld.
    

 

March 1857

London

 

    
This is positively, absolutely the last time,
Lady Viola Preston promised herself as she squeezed through the ground floor window of the posh London townhome.

    
Viola had contemplated Lady Henson’s new emerald necklace over the soup course at Lieutenant Quinn’s dinner party last night, but then the lieutenant let slip that he’d brought back a couple handfuls of uncut stones from India. A newly returned nabob shouldn’t flaunt the details of his wealth if he didn’t wish to be relieved of it.

    
Viola’s fence would have to chop up Lady Henson’s necklace and even then, the gems were large and of uniquely deep color. They might be recognized. But uncut stones—and one of them big as a peach pit, if the lieutenant were to be believed—were nigh untraceable. Viola would get full value for them.

    
And then she’d stop.

    
Only once more,
Viola vowed silently. Though, like the Shakespearean heroine for whom she was named, she’d miss wearing men’s trousers from time to time. They were ever so much more comfortable than a corset and hoops.

    
From somewhere deep in the elegant row house came a low creak. Viola held her breath. The longcase clock in the main hall ticked. When she heard nothing else, she realized it was only the sigh of an older home squatting down on its foundations for the night.

    
The room she’d broken into still held the stale scents of cigar smoke and brandy from the dinner party of the previous evening. But there were no fresh smells, which meant Lieutenant Quinn had taken Lord Montjoy up on his offer to introduce him at his club this evening.

    
Probably visiting a brothel instead.
No matter. The house was empty and why made no difference at all.

    
She cat-footed up the main stairs, on the watch for the help. The lieutenant hadn’t fully staffed his home yet, but he’d brought a native servant back with him from India. During the dinner party, Viola had noticed the turbaned fellow in the shadows, directing the borrowed footmen and giving quiet commands to the temporary serving girls.

    
The Indian servant would most likely be in residence.

    
So long as I steer clear of the kitchen or the garret, I’ll be fine,
Viola told herself.

    
Besides, the stones would be in Lieutenant Quinn’s chamber. Her fence had a friend in the brick mason’s guild who, for a pretty price, happily revealed the location of the
ton
’s secret stashes. Townhouses on this fashionable London street were all equipped with identical wall safes in the master’s chamber. The newfangled tumbler lock would open without protest under Viola’s deft touch.

    
She had a gift. Two, actually, but she didn’t enjoy the other one half so much.

    
Slowly, she opened the bedchamber door.
Good.
It had been oiled recently. She heard only the faint scrape of hinges.

    
The heavy damask curtains were drawn, so Viola stood still, waiting for her eyes to adjust to the deeper darkness. There! A landscape in a gilt frame on the south wall marked the location of the safe.

    
Viola padded across the room and inched the painting’s hanging wires along the picture rail, careful not to let the hooks near the ceiling slide off. She’d have the devil’s own time reattaching them if they did. With any luck at all, she’d slide the painting right back and it might be days before Lieutenant Quinn discovered the stones were missing. After moving the frame over about a foot, she found the safe right where Willie’s friend said it would be.

    
Viola put her ear to the lock and closed her eyes, the better to concentrate. When she heard a click or felt a slight hitch beneath her touch she knew she’d discovered part of the combination. After only a few tries and errors, the final tumbler fell into place and Viola opened the safe.

    
The dark void was empty. She reached in to trace the edges of the iron box with her fingertips.
 

    
“Looking for something?” A masculine voice rumbled from a shadowy corner.

    
Blast!
Viola bolted for the door, but it slammed shut. The Indian servant stepped from his place of concealment behind it.

    
“Please do not make to flee or I am sorry to say I shall have shoot you.” The Hindu’s melodious accent belied his serious threat.

    
Viola ran toward the window, hoping it was open behind the curtain. And that there was a friendly bush below to break her fall.
 

    
Lieutenant Quinn grabbed her before she reached it. He crushed her spine to his chest, his large hand splayed over one of her unbound breasts.

    
“Bloody hell! It’s a woman. Turn up the gas lamp, Sanjay.”

    
The yellow light of the wall sconce flooded the room. Viola blinked against the sudden brightness. Then she stomped down on her captor’s instep as hard as she could.

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