Always in My Dreams (29 page)

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Authors: Jo Goodman

BOOK: Always in My Dreams
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He picked up Skye's clothes and laid them over the back of a chair. The paper she'd been writing on before he'd come into the room fell out of her apron pocket. He couldn't believe he had forgotten about it. Walker saw it as another sign he was in too deep.

Hunkering down, he retrieved the paper. It had been folded carelessly into quarters. He opened it and stared... and whistled softly. Based on his own very limited contact with Parnell's invention, he found Skye's drawing to have a high degree of accuracy. He wondered how much she really knew about engines. Had she only drawn it from memory, or did she understand its workings? He looked over his shoulder at the bed. She was still sleeping, her back to him.

Walker absently folded the paper and stuffed it back in her pocket. He stood and rested his hip on the edge of the writing table. Which of Parnell's investors did she work for? he wondered. How many were there that he didn't know about? The kind of business arrangement Parnell had was more scam than scheme. It was no wonder he wanted a gun as quick to fire as the Colt he'd carried the other day.

Walker left the desk and went to his wardrobe. Parnell's gun was still where he had hidden it. He supposed it would be safe enough there. Tomorrow he would take it with him. Parnell and Mrs. Reading could search all they wanted, but the gun was leaving the house. He didn't relish the thought of Parnell pointing it at him again. He hadn't thought it would come to killing the inventor, but it might, if that happened. His warning hadn't been an idle one.

He stepped away from the wardrobe and shut the door carefully.

"You don't have to be so quiet," Skye said. "I'm awake." Her eyes were still closed and her voice was just a sleepy whisper, but she had made the effort to turn on her side toward him.

Walker smiled. "Go back to sleep. I'm leaving."

"Mm-hmm."

Her murmur drew him to the bed. He sat on the edge and placed a hand on her bare shoulder. His thumb stroked her skin. "I'll have dinner brought up to you. Don't worry. I'll send Annie with it."

She rolled on her back and raised her eyelids to half mast. The back of her hand touched her forehead as she brushed aside a strand of hair. "Do you have to go?" she asked.

He nodded. "I've spent too much time here already."

She surprised herself by blushing, but she welcomed the kiss she got in response. "Will the lock keep Parnell out?" she asked, when he sat up.

"This one will. There's no duplicate key for this room. Or rather, there is, but I have both." He patted his trouser pocket. "And no, you're not getting one."

Skye had no desire to be locked in, but the alternative worried her more. "Will you bring me something to read?" she asked. "I never had time to move my things in here today. Now, it seems a useless exercise. Will you get the book I took from Parnell's library?"

"The one on the Granville family?"

"Yes. I don't suppose I'm going to learn anything else about the ghost firsthand. I may as well learn something about him in his corporeal life."

Walker laughed. "You're quite serious about this ghost, aren't you?"

"Until I can prove otherwise," she said, unmoved by his amusement. "There's something to be said for entertaining
all
possibilities."

"I'll try to remember that," he said drily.

She raised herself on her elbows. The coverlet slid a few inches over her chest and rested on the outer curve of her breasts. "I suppose you have an explanation for how you got that knot at the back of your head?"

Walker barely heard the question. He found himself utterly fascinated that the coverlet could hover
just so
on Skye's breasts, rising and falling with each breath, but not sliding even a fraction of an inch lower.

Amused and disarmed by his boyish grin, Skye looked down at herself. "I wore a ballgown with a bodice like this once to the Astors'," she said, without thinking. "It was emerald satin and had more flounces on it than a dance hall girl's petticoat. Of course it had stays in it to hold it up. And I wore a corset that made it impossible to draw a breath." She pointed to the swell of her breasts and the line of the coverlet. "What's keeping this up is anyone's guess."

Skye looked up at Walker, her smile full of feigned innocence, her eyes filled with flirty guile.

He wasn't smiling in return. "Just who the hell are you?"

 

 

 

Chapter 9

 

"What do you mean?" Skye asked.

"Emerald satin ballgowns," he said. "How is it that you had one of those and ended up working for Jonathan Parnell?" He had known she wasn't a housekeeper, but he hadn't fully considered what her background might be. Somebody's mistress? No, that was something he was sure she wasn't, at least until now.

Skye didn't so much as blink. "The dress was a hand-me-down," she said. It was perfectly true. Her mother had never been of a mind to settle all her daughters in new gowns each season. The emerald one with the wicked bodice had belonged to Rennie.

"But you wore it to the Astors'," he pointed out. "Invitations there aren't given to just anyone."

"I'm
not
just anyone," she retorted. "This was a benefit for Jennings Memorial, and Dr. Turner and his wife insisted I accompany them." The benefit was a true enough event, but it wasn't when she had worn the emerald gown, and it hadn't been to raise money for the hospital. She couldn't even remember if she'd seen Scott and Susan Turner there. Skye was rather chagrined to realize what a facile liar she had become. "There were many people there who wouldn't have been in the Astor home otherwise. Dr. Turner managed to put almost fifty patients on the invitation list, some of them indigents from the Bowery and Paradise Square. The whole thing caused quite a fuss, but it raised money."

Walker was watching her closely. Things had a way of rolling glibly off her tongue. "I think there's a bit of the blarney about you, Mary Schyler."

More than a bit. Anyone in her family could have told him. She managed to look properly affronted, but then he was kissing her and she realized he didn't really care who she was. He just liked her. The thought warmed her. Her arms stole around his back and the coverlet finally slipped over her breasts.

It took a visible effort on Walker's part to draw away. He looked down at the fallen coverlet that she was in no hurry to raise. If not for the heat in her cheeks, he could almost accuse her of being brazen. "It
would,
fall now," he said, sighing.

* * *

"Everyone's talking about it," Annie said. She cleared a place on Skye's bedside table and set the dinner tray down. Matt was trying to climb onto the bed where Skye was sitting. Annie was prepared to scold him when Skye put her book aside and hauled Matt over the edge.

"He's all right," she said, pulling him into her lap. Skye was sitting crosslegged at the head of the bed, a pillow at the small of her back. She played pat-a-cake with him while she talked. "I imagine they're glad to see me go."

Annie shook her head and her mouth flattened. "That's not true at all."

Skye's glance was skeptical.

"Well, perhaps Mrs. Reading feels that way. But the twins are going to miss you, and Hank says you were good for the place. Jenny's keeping her counsel, but she's not mean-spirited. I know I'm sorry that Mr. Parnell's dismissed you."

"I can't say that I'm sorry," Skye said truthfully. "But all the same, I'm going to miss you. Have you been asked to take the position as housekeeper?"

She nodded, fiddling with the covered dishes on the tray. It wouldn't have been proper to show too much pleasure. After all, her new position had come at Skye's expense. "He spoke to me before dinner. Mrs. Reading made the announcement to the others."

"I'm happy for you," Skye said sincerely. "You'll do fine."

Annie's dour expression lightened. "Thank you. That means a lot to me. I wouldn't have this opportunity if it weren't for you."

Skye waved her gratitude aside. She rested her chin on the crown of Matthew's blond head. "You know, Annie," she said casually, "I was wondering about last night."

"Hmm?" She laid out the silverware on the tray.

"You were so prompt in responding to my cry. I don't think I expressed my appreciation."

"I don't expect any thanks," said Annie. "I didn't really do anything."

"But you came. I'm a little surprised you heard me. I wouldn't have thought I could have been heard above stairs. I hope I didn't frighten Matt."

"Oh, no," she said, shaking her head. "Matt slept through the whole thing. I probably would have, too, if I hadn't been up already. I was coming down the hall on my way to the kitchen when I heard you scream. I don't mind saying I nearly lost my heart in that moment. It came as near to jumpin' out of my chest as it ever has."

"So you were in the hall, then."

Annie's voice dropped to a whisper. "You know I can't abide those back stairs. It's all I can do to use them to get to the third floor. I've a fearful imagination when it comes to things like ghosts."

Skye made a wry face and pointed to the book beside her. "I'm beginning to think it's the same for me." She let Matthew grab her hand and pull it back into the pat-a-cake ritual. "You must have been on your way downstairs."

Annie nodded. "I was." The corners of her mouth drooped a fraction lower. "But what makes you think so?"

"You weren't carrying anything from the kitchen."

"I could have had myself a cup of tea there," she pointed out.

"You could have," she agreed. "But I can't imagine that you'd want to sit alone downstairs when you could be back with your son."

Annie admitted it was the very thing that had gone through her mind. "You've very observant," she said. "I noticed that about you from the very first." She extended her hands to her son.

Skye gave Matt a small boost to help him reach his mother's outstretched arms. "Then you're observant as well. I suppose it's all part and parcel of being a good housekeeper."

Annie picked up Matt and rested his small squirming body on her hip. "That's true enough," she said. "And I aim to be a good one."

Once Annie and Matthew were gone, Skye pulled the dinner tray onto her lap and ate while she read. The history of the Granvilles was infinitely more interesting than any of the fare Mrs. Reading had prepared for her. It wasn't long before Skye pushed aside her meal and concentrated on the book.

The Granville family could trace its origins to an arranged marriage between Lady Jane Suffolk and Edward Granville. Something was made of Lady Jane's lineage, but little was noted about Edward Granville's birth and parentage. Skye could guess at the reasons for that. Still, it was the introduction of the Granville name, and some mention had to be made of it.

The most significant early event for the family was Edward's participation in the voyages to the New World. He sailed with Raleigh until the Queen had Raleigh beheaded and then, knowing the risks of displeasing the Queen, he accepted an appointment as commander of his own vessels. Far from displeasing the Queen, Edward Granville had distinguished himself with his service. He amassed treasure for the Queen and a small fortune for himself by raiding the coffers of Spanish galleons. As a reward he was given land in America.

Edward Granville never made much use of the property during his lifetime. Apparently he preferred pirating to planting and visited his property on only two occasions. It was on the second voyage that his treasure-laden ship was attacked by raiders on the Hudson. He lost a fortune, his ship, and nearly his life. He never returned to America's shores again.

It was left to his youngest son, who, with no other prospects, claimed the land for himself. Robert was unmarried when he went to America, but once he was established, he sent home for an English bride. Skye imagined the young settler exaggerated both his good fortune and his consequence. He managed to make a match that he could not have made if he had remained in London. His bride, Lady Emma Cordery, was the daughter of the Earl of Whitested. She could have had her pick of suitors, but she chose the youngest son of a bastard privateer. It was unclear if the earl actually supported the match or whether Lady Emma had defied him to take her place beside Robert Granville. It was also unclear if Robert and Emma had known each other before their wedding. The family historians seemed to be reluctant to put some things in writing.

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