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“How many spectators are expected?” asked Henning.

The question prompted a harried sigh from the earl. “The official guest list has around twelve hundred names. But judging by all the forged tickets that have shown up at other events, I think we can expect double that number.”

“A horde of onlookers, a gaggle of Love Queens, a troupe of prancing knights in bloody velvet, a skulking pack of vermin looking to commit murder . . .” mused Henning. His chair scraped back as he shifted and helped himself to another sultana-studded muffin. “I take it you have some ideas on how to spike their guns, metaphorically speaking, that is?”

“As a matter of fact, I do.” Saybrook turned to a fresh page in his notebook. “Arianna, perhaps you could brew up a pot of your special spiced chocolate. We may be here for a while.”

21

From Lady Arianna’s Chocolate Notebooks
Chocolate Peanut Butter “Bullets”

2 cups sifted confectioners’ sugar

¾ cup smooth peanut butter

4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

½ teaspoon vanilla extract

¼ teaspoon salt

6 oz. semisweet chocolate chips

½ teaspoon vegetable shortening

1. Put sugar, peanut butter, butter, vanilla and salt into a mixing bowl and beat well with a wooden spoon. Roll peanut butter mixture into 1-inch balls and transfer to a wax-paper-lined cookie sheet in a single layer. Freeze until firm, 15–20 minutes.

2. Melt chocolate and shortening in a small heat-proof bowl set over a small pot of simmering water, stirring often. Remove pot and bowl together from heat.

3. Working with about 6 peanut butter balls at a time, insert a toothpick into the center of a ball and dip about three-quarters of the ball into the melted chocolate, leaving about a 1-inch circle of peanut butter visible at the top. Twirl toothpick between your finger and thumb to swirl off excess chocolate, then transfer to another wax-paper-lined cookie sheet, chocolate side down. Slide out toothpick and repeat dipping process with remaining peanut butter balls and chocolate, reheating chocolate if necessary.

4. Freeze “Bullets” until firm. Smooth out toothpick holes left in peanut butter. “Bullets” will keep well sealed in cool place for up to 1 week and up to 2 weeks in refrigerator. Serve at room temperature or chilled.

“Damnation, I still don’t like this.”

It was the next evening, and in the smoky light of the carriage lamp, Saybrook’s face looked even more forbidding than it had the previous day, when the preliminary plan had been drawn up. Shadows accentuated the chiseled angles, but made any hint of expression impossible to discern.

“I know you don’t,” intoned Arianna, using her best Voice of Reason. “But we all agreed that Rochemont must have no reason to think that his devilry has been discovered. If I suddenly turn cold and start to avoid him, it will stir up his suspicions. Besides, you need me to keep him distracted for the next few hours.”

The seat suddenly shifted, a rasp of leather and wool rippling through the swirling shadows as her husband turned and braced an arm on the squabs. “Yes, I know that cold logic dictates that we proceed on a certain course. But at the moment I am not talking about reason, I am talking about emotion.”

Arianna didn’t quite dare meet his gaze. She remained in awe of his ability to be so in command of his feelings. Calm, controlled. And yet his voice seemed to crackle with an intensity that made her feel a little uncertain.

A little uneasy.

“Arianna, look at me.”

Reluctantly, she raised her chin a notch. When she had first met him, her immediate impression had been that his eyes were an opaque, impenetrable shade of charcoal black. She had, however, quickly seen that she was wrong. The depths of their chocolate brown hue reflected a range of subtle nuances, from dark brewed coffee and molten toffee to fire-flecked amber at moments like now, when his passions were aroused.

“Danger lies all around us, coiled like a serpent,” he said slowly. “And ready to strike without warning.”

“I’m always on guard,” she assured him.

His expression softened, in a way that defied description. “I know that. And I’m not sure whether I take comfort in the fact, or whether it makes me want to gnash my teeth and howl at the moon.”

“The moon is playing hide-and-seek,” she quipped, indicating the silvery scudding of clouds just visible through the window glass.

“So are you,” he said softly. “Always dancing in and out of black velvet shadows. Sometimes it feels you are as far away as Venus or the North Star.”

“Sandro, I . . .” Arianna hesitated. “I have learned from experience to be careful. Sentiment . . . can make one weak,” she whispered.

“It can also make you strong.” He closed his hand over hers and held it for a heartbeat before slowly releasing his hold. “So much is unknown and unresolved about this mission. But be assured of one thing: I will never, ever allow any harm to come to you.”

A rash, reckless promise. Nobody could make such absurd assurances.

And yet the words sent her heart skittering against her ribs.

Thud, thud, thud. To her ears, the sound seemed as loud as gunpowder explosions.

Saybrook was silent for a moment longer and then reached up and framed her face between his hands. “Earlier this year, a friend recited one of Byron’s new unpublished poems to me. I committed it to memory because it reminds me of you.”

Arianna heard his soft intake of breath. “She walks in beauty, like the night; Of cloudless climes and starry skies; And all that’s best of dark and bright.”

Dark and bright. She sat very still, mesmerized by the glimmer of sparks swirling in the shadows of his lashes.

“That is indescribably lovely,” she stammered.

“Yes, isn’t it?” His kiss, though swift, took her breath away.

Reaching up, she twined her fingers in his long hair, savoring for a fleeting instant the silky softness against her skin.

“I love you.” The whisper, like the embrace, was like a quicksilver sear of heat, imprinting itself on her skin. On her heart. On the terrible tangle of nameless fears that dwelled deep, deep inside her.

Just as quickly it was gone.

“Never forget that.” Pulling back, he added, “I shall see you later,” and then disappeared out the door before the carriage had rolled to a halt.

Moonlight played over the empty spot on the seat.

Arianna chafed at her arms, but strangely enough, her bare skin did not feel chilled by the night air.

Perhaps because as Sandro said, I am more a creature of the Moon than of the Sun.

But much as it was tempting to linger alone in thought, she reminded herself that she must slide into her third—or was it fourth?—skin and make ready to act out her role for the evening.

An aristocratic wife, bored with the tedium of married life. A jaded lady, tempted to play naughty games.

Drawing on her gloves, like a warrior of old donning his gauntlets for battle, she assumed a martial frame of mind.

Mano a mano. Saybrook had learned that Rochemont would definitely be there tonight, so the upcoming encounter promised to be a cerebral fight with the enemy. One on one, stripped down to the bare-bones clash of will against will.