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“Help. Murderers! Assassins!” Screams echoed in the dark from a ways off. Will’s man was escaping.

“Fuck!” Rupert swore and took off at a run to silence the man before his cries brought the coppers down on them. How had Will let him get away?

Just over the next rise, Rupert spotted his partner. Down on top of a figure. Stabbing repeatedly into the waistcoat with his knife. Make it look vicious, the Lieutenant had said—the better to horrify the queen and her subjects. Will was doing his job with enthusiasm. No doubt the man was already done for—he wasn’t moving at all. And as for Disraeli, he’d have bled out by now.

“Enough.” Rupert grasped Will by the back of his collar and pulled him off the body.

Thirty

On the arm of her handsome blue-eyed husband, Louise stepped into the splendor of the grand ballroom of Stafford House. Near St. James’s Palace, this was the exquisite home of the Duchess of Sutherland during the Season. Even after the duke’s death, his widow entertained on a lavish scale. A patron of the opera, she had opened her home to the elite of London after that night’s performance.

Victoria declined to attend, instead sending Louise and Lorne to represent her. She’d claimed fatigue and the need to conserve her energy for her Accession Day celebrations in just two weeks.

Bertie had convinced the queen that she must make a public appearance for that occasion, if for none other during the year. The queen’s subjects were growing impatient with her self-imposed isolation and obsession with mourning. And so there would be a formal procession by carriage, accompanied by the horse guard from Buckingham to Westminster Abbey, where the service would be held celebrating Victoria’s taking up the crown worn by her uncle, King William IV.

Once she began planning the day, though, the queen grew more enthusiastic. Louise felt greatly relieved that her mother had agreed to follow her ministers’ and Bertie’s advice. Louise, far more than anyone else in her family, understood the common people and their need to believe their country still had strong leadership.

As soon as Louise and Lorne were announced, the orchestra launched into Strauss’s “Artist’s Life” waltz, in honor of the princess and her love of art. Dancers whirled across the floor, ball gowns shimmering, medals glinting from lapels. Smiles were the expression of the evening. Fear of Fenians, wars in Europe, or uprisings on the Dark Continent—all that was serious seemed distant and inconsequential. But Louise could not cast off a premonition that something evil lurked close by, ready to steal away what little happiness she might grasp for herself.

After the Viennese, she danced a cotillion with Lorne then a polka with the new Duke of Wellington who had so recently lost his beloved father, the hero of Waterloo. The duke was gracious even in his mourning, and a fine dancer. She looked around for Stephen Byrne, but he was nowhere to be seen. Either he wasn’t here or he was making himself invisible, as he so irritatingly managed to do whenever he chose. She had counted on him being here tonight, with good news about Darvey.

Another waltz began. Lorne reappeared at her side, his blond curls and flashing sapphire eyes the focus of every female in the immense room. And not a little admired—she noticed—by several of the men. “Shall we?” Lorne said, holding out his hand to her. “The orchestra seems particularly fine tonight.”

She managed a smile for him, or rather for the hundreds of watching eyes. Lorne escorted her onto the dance floor. She rested her fingertips lightly on his sleeve, lifted the hem of her gown with her free hand, and off they flew. Louise caught an approving gaze from her brother Leo as they swept past him and his little clutch of friends.

“You ought to have been an actress,” Lorne murmured in her ear. “Everyone is commenting on our love match.”

“Oh, please,” she said.

“But I must admit to a small amount of distress on one count.”

They negotiated the end of the room with a graceful heel turn and floated on down the length of polished parquet floor.

“About what?” she asked.

“I have heard that you are making inquiries of a . . . sensitive nature. Is that true?”

Louise tensed even as the music swelled to a glorious crescendo. Had Byrne told her husband about her interest in finding Donovan? “I am, although it is nothing to concern you.”

His voice sounded less casual now. “It is most definitely my concern if those investigations put at risk my credibility as your husband.”

Did she hear threat in his tone? “We have a bargain. I will keep it.”

“All I ask is that you keep me out of Newgate, my dear. Your freedom for mine. Oui?”

“Yes.” She had to admit he was keeping up his end of the deal. He hadn’t once questioned her right to travel alone, to run the Women’s shop, to spend hours with her painting or in Amanda’s company. “I keep my promises.”

His gaze softened. “There are discreet ways in which you might satisfy your needs.”

She looked up into his dazzling eyes, now piqued with sensual intrigue. “It is more complicated for me,” she said.

“Is it? I might easily find you a willing lover.”

She should have been shocked. It was a scandalous suggestion. But all she could do was laugh at the absurdity of her situation.

She shook her head at him. “Oh, Lorne. You really wouldn’t be in the least jealous?”

“How could I be?” He studied her face, his eyes tracing her lips, throat, bare shoulders. “And yet, you’re right, my dear. There’s still my pride to consider. I cannot bed you, but part of me is reluctant to see you in the arms of another man. Foolish, is it not?”

“Foolish indeed,” she agreed. But there was a sweetness about the marquess that she knew would never let her stay angry with him for long. She tenderly stroked his cheek with a gloved hand. The music slowed. She swayed in his arms, and she imagined to anyone watching they must have made a pretty picture. “Lorne, what are we to do? Is this how I am supposed to live out my life? Forever without affection? Without children?” It was a repeat of their wedding night conversation. But something she still couldn’t let go of.

“I will be as affectionate and caring as many husbands, my dear. I promise you every consideration, but the one.”

The lump in her throat swelled, threatening to choke her. She drew a shaky breath as tears teased her eyes. “I wish . . . I wish . . .”

“Yes?” he asked.

She blinked away the droplets. “Never mind.” It was hopeless.

The music had ended. They stood in the middle of the vast, glittering ballroom beneath a triple-tiered chandelier of hundreds of Murano glass prisms as couples slowly drifted back to their seats or exchanged partners. Louise felt unable to move. He was a kind man. She really should be happy.

“Come,” Lorne said, reaching for her again, “this is a gentler waltz. I will show you off to London tonight, and soon to all of Europe. They will see what a beautiful woman I’ve married and say, ‘Ah, what a perfect couple they make.’ We will trick the world, my dear. Be brave.”

She blinked away the last of her tears, rested her right hand in his, her left reaching up to lightly touch his elegant shoulder. Louise let him guide her through the intricate, swirling one-two-three steps of the opening strains of Carl Maria von Weber’s gorgeous “Invitation to the Dance.” Her pearl gray gown swept the floor, rustling at her ankles, her heart lifting with the soaring strains of the violins.