Turning, he scanned the room. Horatio might have concealed his latest find in plain sight, amid the treasure trove of his collection.
When Phyllida returned to the drawing room, she found her nemesis examining the halberd responsible for the dent in his skull. He looked at her. "Was it always kept here-behind the door?"
"I understand so."
He studied her, then looked at the axe-head. Raising the halberd, he let it fall to his other hand, watching how the weighted head swung. "I would have thought, if it had fallen or been wielded with intent…"
Then the axe should have cleaved his skull in two. Phyllida didn't want to think about it. "This part here"-she pointed to the rounded side-"was apparently what connected with your head."
"Indeed?" He hefted the weapon fully upright, then looked at her. "How did it fall?"
She met his eyes directly-and said nothing.
He held her gaze, and let the tension stretch.
And stretch…
She lifted her chin. "I have to go to the church to sort out the flowers for the funeral, and then I must speak with the curate. You can stay here, if you like."
Lucifer replaced the halberd. "I'll come with you."
He'd said his last good-bye to Horatio.
Contained and uncommunicative, she led the way through the garden. As they rounded the fountain, he paused. "The flowers for the church-use some of these peonies. They were Martha's favorites."
She stopped and glanced back at him, then at the flowers. Then she nodded and continued on.
They crossed the lane and started up the common. The expanse of green was kept clipped by the sheep allowed to graze over it; it rose in a gradual slope from the lane to the crest on which the church stood.
Lucifer matched his long strides to Phyllida's and breathed deeply. The air was fresh, sun-warmed; the scents and sounds of a June afternoon ebbed and flowed around them. The ache in his head was subsiding, and the best distraction Colyton had to offer was walking beside him.
He was intrigued, and couldn't entirely understand why. Indeed, he wasn't sure he approved. His preference, until now, had been for ladies of more bountiful charms, yet Phyllida Tallent's slender grace acted powerfully on his ever-ready male senses. Being so easily aroused by a gently reared, intelligent, and stubborn virgin, one who was making no effort to attract him at all, had to be fate's idea of a joke. Perhaps being hit on the head had affected him more than he'd realized.
Whatever the cause, walking beside and a little behind her left him all too aware whenever the frolicking breeze plastered her gown to her legs and bottom, or when it flicked at the hem of her skirt, exposing slim ankles. Her svelte figure contained a suppressed energy one part of him-the wild, untamed pirate part of him-instantly recognized; he longed to wind it tight, then release it before plunging into its core.
Climbing the hill was easing his head at the expense of intensifying the ache in his loins. An ache destined to remain unrelieved. Drawing a bracing breath, he looked ahead, and deliberately shifted his thoughts.
She preceded him into the church and went straight to the altar. Picking up a vase, she headed through an open door into a small side chamber.
He lounged against a pew. The small church was well endowed with carvings and stained glass. The oriel window above the entrance was particularly pleasing. It was fitting that Horatio's funeral would be held here; Horatio would have appreciated the church's beauties.
A beauty of a different sort swept back in and effortlessly recaptured his attention.
Phyllida jumped when large hands covered hers as she wrestled with the urn on the font.
"Let me."
She did. The reverberations of his voice played up and down her spine and left her nerves jangling. Wordlessly, she led the way through the vestry and out through the open back door. She indicated the pile of dead flowers. "Just toss them there."
He did. She retrieved the urn from his hands; without being asked, he wielded the pump handle so she could rinse it. With a nod of thanks, she swept back into the vestry; swiping up a cloth, she vigorously buffed the urn.
He halted in the doorway, almost blocking out the light; propping one shoulder against the frame, he watched her.
The vestry suddenly seemed very small. Awareness prickled over her skin.
"The funeral will be tomorrow, late morning. I'll send flowers over first thing-in this weather, they wilt so quickly." She was babbling. She'd never babbled in her life. "Especially if they're not picked before the sun strikes them."
"Does that mean you'll be flitting among the flowers at dawn?"
She wanted to look at him but didn't. "Of course not. Our gardener knows just how I like them picked."
"Ah. No need, then, to get up too early."
It was his tone, the deep resonance in his voice, that gave his words their full meaning. For an instant, she froze, her hands on the urn, then she sucked in a breath, grasped the urn, set it on the shelf, and swung to face him. Her expression, she was sure, remained calmly superior, unruffled, and serene. No one in the village ever saw beyond that, which made protecting herself and managing them very easy.
His gaze, however, settled on her eyes. He saw further, deeper-she wasn't at all comfortable with what he might see. "I need to speak with Mr. Filing, the curate. Given your injury, you should rest for a few minutes. I suggest you sit in a pew in the cool of the church. I'll collect you when I've finished with Mr. Filing."
He continued to study her face, her eyes. After an unnerving moment, he glanced back outside, over his left shoulder. "Is that the curate's house?"
"Yes. That's the Rectory."
He straightened away from the doorframe; the movement did nothing to reduce the sense of entrapment she felt. "I'll come with you."
Phyllida drew in a breath, and held it. With anyone else she would have argued, but there was an undercurrent in his voice that warned her she had no chance of swaying him. Not without a fight-and fighting with him was too dangerous. "As you wish."
He moved back and she stepped past him, into the sunshine. She led the way down the winding path to the Rectory, snug in a hollow just below the crest. Shutting the vestry door, he followed on her heels.
His intention was impossible to mistake. He knew she was hiding something; he was going to cling to her side-unnerve her as much as he could-until she told him what it was. Or until he uncovered her secrets for himself.
The latter, Phyllida decided, was not a fate to tempt. How soon could she see Mary Anne?
Lucifer followed her to the Rectory, too conscious of the lithe grace of her stride, the unfettered freedom with which she moved. To senses steeped in consideration of the feminine, she registered as something beyond the norm. Infinitely more desirable, and infinitely more elusive.
Why, he wondered, did she not wish him to be a party to her meeting with the curate?
That gentleman had seen them coming; he stood waiting for them at his front door. Fair, pale, and slightly built, his clothes fastidiously neat, Filing had the appearance of a gentleman aesthete. He greeted Phyllida with a smile, one that held the warmth of long-standing friendship.
"Good morning, Mr. Filing. Allow me to present Mr. Cynster, an old friend of Horatio's."
"Indeed?" Filing offered his hand; Lucifer shook it. "Such a sad occurrence. It must have been a shock to discover Horatio slain."