Authors: A. W. Exley
Tags: #Mystery, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical Fiction, #Steampunk
Nate’s dark brows drew together in a scowl. “He’s a rogue, watch him; but he cares deeply for his people.” He sent a caress along their bond before he reached for her physically.
She took his hand in hers and ran her thumbs over his palm. “I’m going to teach the little ones to read, I want them to have choices.”
Nate relaxed his pose under her touch and a smile quirked his lips. “Just what the world needs, more smart women who can fight their way out of a corner. I’ll talk to Liam about finding space for you to use.”
“Thank you.” Now she needed to find a way to make learning fun so the children didn’t wise up to her too quickly.
He held his arms open and she went to him. As he held her tight, she let loose a sigh and her body hummed. She was learning that relationships were hard work, but these moments of quiet peace made it worthwhile.
“What plans do you have?” Nate asked as he pushed around the papers stacked on his desk, looking for anything urgent. One caught his attention and he extracted it from the pile.
Cara perched on a corner of the desk. “I need to go see McToon and decide what to do with my Soho house. It’s evicted the only tenant we could find.”
His gaze flicked from lines of text up to her. “You talk about that house as though it lived.”
“I think it does, and it has always hated me. In hindsight, perhaps it has absorbed an artifact? My father buried the Heart in the basement, who knows what might have leeched into the brickwork.” She chewed her bottom lip. “I know I searched the house, but I can’t help thinking there is something else there.”
He dropped the memo and brushed a thumb over the back of her knuckles. “Are you all right to go back?”
She shrugged. “Yes. I’m not fond of the cellar, though, after what happened down there.”
A brief smile quirked his lips. “Weaver tried to cave my head in with a dock exoskeleton, so I understand the sentiment.”
“I shan’t go alone, I have Brick and I’ll hide behind him if the house gives me any trouble. On the off chance it does try to electrocute me, I would be grateful if you kept me alive.”
“Always,” he whispered, and dropped a kiss on her hand before releasing her.
Nate folded Cara in his embrace and his lips slid over hers in a gentle tease, somewhat placating her concern. She sighed and leaned into the kiss, over far too soon.
He pulled back from her. “I have several meetings today, including one with Victoria. I’ll tell you all the details over dinner.”
Late that night, she awoke to find herself alone. She pulled a velvet robe tight around her naked figure and padded down to the study on bare feet. The household slumbered except for Nate and one lone man standing guard in the entrance way. They dimmed the lights at night and the bulbs threw long shadows, illuminating the face of the man outside the study door.
She nodded as she pushed the door open and crept into Nate’s domain. The deep green walls absorbed the light and gave nothing back, the only illumination the dance of firelight and the single beam from the lamp.
He sat at the desk, papers scattered around him, a small red box open in front of him and his head in his hands.
She padded closer. “What’s keeping you awake so late?”
He looked up and his hungry stare roamed her body for a moment. Then he sighed, pushed back the chair, and beckoned for her to sit on his lap. “I am kept awake by a surplus of possibilities. Like a general faced with a war on many different fronts, the time has come to pull back, regroup and pick a direction to strike.”
She nestled into him and he slipped his arms around her. “You’re playing general now? Does this mean you have a plan for the army sitting in St Giles Rookery?”
He gave a short laugh. “No, that is my contingency plan. Like when you wear your pistols, you might never use them, but there is a comfort in knowing they are within reach.”
A chill of premonition shot down her spine.
He will use his army, one day.
“So start at the beginning of what is preying on your mind. Full disclosure, remember?”
His voice rumbled through his chest as he spoke. “The long range airships have been tested and are ready to go. We can open up trade routes to the farthest corners of the Earth, such as Australia and Asia.”
The behemoths rivalled a naval frigate in size. Their construction dominated time, money, and gossip in the Lyons empire for the last six months. On the first test run, the massive ship blotted out the sun and nearly caused a panic in the rural village where Nate had it built. “Will those routes be financially viable?”
“Not just viable, lucrative. We could transport emigrants who don’t want to spend three months in a leaky ship’s hold and bring back a wealth of stock and gems from the new countries.”
Her hand rested over his heart. She found comfort in the single beat resonating between their bodies. “So definitely worth pursuing. What else is worrying you? Problems in Lowestoft with the local thug?” Her hand played with the buttons on his waistcoat as they talked.
“No, he’s a gnat and Jackson will squash him.” He paused as though reluctant to breach the next subject. After several heartbeats, he pointed to the red box. “That contains the prime minister’s idea of a joke. Palmerston has sent me papers concerning Poor Law reforms along with a Writ of Summons instructing me to take up my seat in parliament.” His hand stroked her back through the thick robe. “I think I’d rather take up residence in the Rookery than play politician.”
She remained silent, lost in thought about the night he claimed St Giles as his own. A brutal business, and one she would gladly see him relinquish. He called it war, but she saw the blood spilled on the ground when he struck like a beast in the dark. The only way to alleviate the unease in her mind was to concentrate on the good the change wrought rather than the profit.
“Unfortunately, Palmerston has Victoria’s backing on this one. She called me in today to tell me it’s time to take up my family seat in the House of Lords.”
Having pushed open his waistcoat, she turned her attention to the tiny shell fastenings on his shirt. “Why this push into the realm of politics?”
He gave a sigh. “As you know, my endeavours have always been on an individual, rather than national, scale and based on pure self-interest. Victoria thinks it is time I grew up and took an interest in the land that gave me my title.”
She looked up; a smile danced over her lips. She could imagine the queen gave Nate a proper scolding about his activities. “I can’t imagine you discussing law reforms with a bunch of stuffy old toffs.”
“Neither can I, but there are those complaining about the seat remaining empty when I am in town. I have a potential excuse though. Victoria has offered to expand my intelligence role. She would give me a diplomatic posting, which would explain why I am absent from the House.”
Cara’s mind jumped to the obvious conclusion. “She wants you as spy master?”
He nodded.
Cara tapped a fingernail on his chest, thinking. “Spy master would give you the freedom to travel and would also give us a cover for gathering the artifacts.”
“My thoughts exactly. But there is only one of me. Taking up such a role would mean pulling back from other areas of business. I can’t afford the time to establish the new trade routes.”
They sat cut off from the world in the small pool of light, as though nothing existed beyond them. The deep of night, while the rest of England slept, was the best time to ponder plans for the future.
An idea sprang into her mind, one that would solve two problems. “Then give Loki the responsibility. Send him to off to the Pacific Ocean, I’m sure the women there would appreciate his presence.”
Nate gave a rumble of laughter. “Loki and responsibility don’t normally belong in the same sentence.”
Her fingers undid the last button on his shirt and she slid a hand against his warm flesh. “Give him the chance. You might be surprised what a bit of responsibility does for that one. He’s smart and can think on his feet, he’ll do well if you expect more of him. Plus he’s always looking for a chance to show off his linguistic skills. He can talk his way into trade deals.”
Nate pulled the tie on her robe and slid the velvet off her shoulder; his lips trailed fire over her collar bone. “I could bring him in as a full partner and increase his percentage in Lyons Cargo, see what he does with the opportunity.”
Cara arched her neck to give him better access. “See, a problem discussed is a problem halved.”
He scooped his arms under her body and stood, lifting her to his chest. “Now, I have another problem we can discuss upstairs.”
Thursday 9
th
January, 1862
Cara sat once more at the desk with her father’s notebook spread in front of her, along with the two ancient volumes given to her by the mad Countess de Sal. The small collection of books had become her guide to identify and find the unusual artifacts. What worried her was how many were out there that her father never located but merely alluded to. Where were they and who held them?
Nate stood behind her, and ran strong fingers along her tight shoulder muscles. “How goes the collection?”
She closed the book and tossed it onto the growing pile of reference material. “We’re nearly done.”
Week by week, she worked her way through her father’s coded entries. Once she located a piece, Nate uplifted the artifact from its hidden resting place, and they locked it away in the secure underground chamber, far below their feet at Lowestoft.
“There are only three more to hunt down, including Boudicca’s Cuff, which you need to retrieve from its purchaser.” She dropped her head forward as he massaged her stiff neck.
“I’m working on it, but the man has the luck of the cuff on his side and I cannot win a bet against him.”
“If you can’t win it, why don’t you just steal it back?” She stared at him, wondering who this man was, that he could bring the most notorious breeding ground of crime under his grasp but baulked at stealing a trifle they needed.
“My wife is recommending larceny?” He arched one eyebrow.
“Use the skills you have at your disposal.” She batted a hand at him. “The next artifact is strange. If I have decoded Father’s notes correctly it’s hidden in the opera house in Covent Garden, but that can’t be right. He concealed them in bank vaults and cellars. Places where they lay in the dark, cold and quiet.”
“And this is the complete opposite, light, loud and crowded.” He ran a hand down her spine as he ran over the options. “Perhaps this particular artifact is better hidden in confusion and would draw attention to itself alone in a basement or vault.”
She chewed her bottom lip, the change of location had to be significant. “The home of the royal opera is a strange place to conceal an artifact, but it makes sense when you put it like that.”
He returned to massaging the kinks from her body after long hours at the desk.
She hummed as he worked magic with his fingers. “I assume we’ll break in when the theatre is empty?”
Fingers moved up to the base of her skull, thumbs working through her hair. “Where would be the fun in that? Let’s make an evening of it. What are we looking for?”