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Andrew squeezed his eyes shut and hugged Spencer back. He had to swallow twice to find his voice. “So do I, Spencer. So do I. But we’ll always be friends.”

“Always?”

“Always. If you ever need anything, you have only to ask.” He patted the lad’s back, then stepped back. “And now, we really must go. Why don’t you get Shadow while I saddle Aphrodite?”

Spencer nodded, then walked toward the third stall. Andrew stood outside the tack room, watching him, wondering how a man could hurt so badly when he felt so bloody numb.

After the heavy wooden stall door closed silently behind Spencer, Andrew drew a deep breath and forced himself to bury this hurt, as he’d buried so many others. He turned to go back to the tack room, but had only taken a single step when Carmichael’s voice said, “Stop right there.”

Andrew turned and watched Carmichael emerge from the shadows, a pistol aimed directly at Andrew.

Maintaining an outward calm he was far from feeling, Andrew rapidly assessed his limited choices-choices made all the more daunting by Spencer’s presence. Damn it, if anything happened to the boy…

He forced his gaze to remain steady on Carmichael’s swollen nose and bruised cheek, and not stray to the stall Spencer had entered. Did Carmichael realize they weren’t alone? If so, he had to make certain Spencer didn’t reveal himself.

Andrew cleared his throat, and said loudly, “How long did you intend to remain hidden in the stall?”

“I wasn’t in a stall,” Carmichael said. “I was outside, taking care of the stable man.”

Relief and fury clenched Andrew’s hands-relief that Carmichael appeared oblivious to the fact they weren’t alone, but fury that this bastard had gotten to Fritzborne. “Did you kill him?”

Carmichael walked slowly closer, his eyes glittering. “I’m not certain. But even if he’s alive, he’s of no use to you. I bound and gagged him most thoroughly.”

Andrew’s gaze flicked down to Carmichael’s pistol, and he inwardly cursed the fact that his own weapon remained well out of his reach inside the tack room, where he’d set it down when he’d reached for the saddle. He still had his knife, but he’d have to choose his moment carefully. If he failed…

When approximately twenty feet separated them, Carmichael stopped. “It took you quite a while to come to the stables.”

“I’d have come sooner if I’d realized you were waiting… Manning.”

Surprise flashed in Carmichael’s eyes. “So you’ve figured out who I am. Good. I’ve waited a long time for this moment. You led me on a very merry chase these past eleven years, Stanton, but now it’s over. Now you will pay for killing my son.”

“Your son killed my wife.”

Your wife? She was never yours. She belonged to Lewis. You stole her. Their marriage was going to unite two powerful families.”

“Your son beat her.”

“What of it? She was his to do with as he wished. If the girl hadn’t been so stupid, she wouldn’t have infuriated him so. Good God, she barely knew how to speak. Her only redeeming qualities were her family connection and enormous fortune.”

Andrew’s eyes narrowed, and he took a step forward. “I suggest you watch what you say about her.”

“And I suggest you not move again. I’m an expert marksman.”

“An expert marksman? I think not. You missed me at Lord Ravensly’s birthday party by at least a foot. Your carelessness nearly killed Lady Catherine.”

Andrew’s jaw clenched at Carmichael’s casual shrug. “One loses accuracy at greater distances, I’m afraid.”

“You attempted to harm her last night as well.”

“Her unexpected presence interfered with my plans.”

“And the museum? Was that your own handiwork, or did you hire someone to vandalize it?”

A frigid smile curled the corners of Carmichael’s lips.

“That was me. I cannot tell you the satisfaction I experienced with every hack of the ax. Every shattering windowpane. Then watching your investors abandon you. All small retributions for what you did to my family.” His eyes blazed with hatred. “Lewis’s marriage to the Northrip heiress would have solved all my family’s financial problems. After you murdered my son, I lost everything. Northrip found out about my debts and backed out of our merger. I killed him, of course, but it yielded me nothing more than the satisfaction of ending his life. My home, my business-all gone. You deserved nothing less in return. First, losing your museum, and now, finally, after many years of searching for you, your life.”

A loud gasp sounded from the doorway. Andrew turned, and his heart nearly ceased beating. Catherine stood inside the doorway, less than twenty feet away, her eyes wide with horror.

“Unless you want me to shoot Mr. Stanton, you will cease fumbling with your skirt now, Lady Catherine.” Without taking his gaze from her, Carmichael continued, “And if you so much as move an inch, Stanton, I’ll kill her. Now, hold your hands out in front of you, Lady Catherine… yes, just like that, and come stand near Mr. Stanton… no, not too close. Stop right there.”

She’d halted approximately six feet away from Andrew. As he spoke to Catherine, a slight movement behind Carmichael caught Andrew’s attention. Spencer, eyes wide, was peeking over the edge of the stall door directly behind Carmichael.

Their eyes met, and Andrew gave a sideways jerk of his head, praying Spencer would understand to remain out of sight. The boy’s head vanished.

Andrew’s mind raced. How could he get Spencer, Catherine, and himself out of this mess, alive? Carmichael stood about four feet directly in front of the stall where Spencer hid. Inspiration suddenly struck and he cleared his throat.

“You know you’ll hang for this.”

“On the contrary, Sidney Carmichael will simply disappear, never to be heard from again.”

“I wouldn’t count on that. My guess is you’ll be swinging from a rope very soon.” He made a tsking sound. “Yes, swinging. Just like an old stall door, just like my old friend Spencer used to do. And would probably love to do again. Right now.”

He heard Catherine’s sharp intake of breath, but he dared not look at her. Confusion flickered in Carmichael’s eyes, then his gaze hardened. “A rather odd choice for your last words, but no matter. Your life is over.” He aimed the pistol directly at Andrew’s chest.

In the blink of an eye, the stall door behind Carmichael swung open, smacking him hard on the back, the momentum throwing him off-balance. Andrew raced forward. Before Carmichael could regain his balance, Andrew’s fists found their marks with two hard, quick blows to Carmichael’s midsection and jaw. He grunted, and the pistol slipped from his fingers, landing on the wooden floor with a thud. Andrew grabbed him by his cravat, and had just brought back his fist to deliver another blow when Carmichael’s eyes rolled back, and he went limp in Andrew’s grip. Andrew let go, and the man fell to the floor in a heap to reveal Catherine, chest heaving, eyes glittering with a combination of fury and triumph, holding a heavy feed pail, which bore a large dent.

“Take that, you bastard,” she said to the fallen man.

There were a dozen things Andrew wanted to say, yet when he opened his mouth, what spilled out was, “You floored him.”

“I owed him one. Are you all right?”

Andrew blinked. “Yes. You?”

“Fine. Only sorry I didn’t have the opportunity to floor him twice.”

Holding that dented bucket, her eyes blazing, color high, she looked magnificent-like an avenging Fury, prepared to fell any brigand who dared to cross her.

“It certainly appears you have no need for those pugilism lessons we discussed.”

Spencer hurried toward them, his complexion pale, his eyes wide. “Is he dead?” he asked.