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“You got some folks worried, you do.”

“Who?”

The man had the strangest eyes, one a pale blue that burned with a fierce intensity, as if lit from within by a fire bordering on madness; the other was light brown. “You think on it, you’ll know.”

“Where’d you get the boots?”

“The boots?” He cast an admiring glance down at them. “Won ’em off a hussar captain, I did. Ain’t they grand?”

“I knew exploring officers in the Army who had no trouble rubbing grease in their hair or dressing themselves in filthy rags, but for some reason they really, really hated wearing anything but their own boots. It got them killed sometimes.”

Diggory Flynn’s face shone with merriment. But all he said was, “I wouldn’t know nothin’ about that. Weren’t ever in the Army, meself.”

Sebastian took a step back, then another, his gaze never leaving Flynn’s face. “Turn around and walk back the way you came.”

“What?”

“You heard me.”

Flynn touched a hand to his battered slouch hat. “Yes, sir,” he said, his grin never slipping. Then he thrust his hands in the sagging pockets of his worn-out coat and sauntered back up the lane, whistling “Bonny Light Horseman” softly beneath his breath.

“I assume this Diggory Flynn is the man you heard behind the curtain in Priss Mulligan’s shop?” said Hero.

She was seated in the armchair beside the bedroom fireplace, one hand trailing lightly over the back of the big, long-haired black cat stretched out beside her. The cat had adopted them some months before, although they’d yet to come up with a name that seemed right for him. It was nearly midnight; the fire on the hearth filled the room with a warm golden glow, while outside, a howling wind buffeted the house and sent the rain clattering against the windowpanes.

“It’s possible,” said Sebastian, holding his dozing son against his shoulder, his palm splayed against the child’s tiny body as he walked back and forth.

“Yet you don’t sound convinced. Why?”

He found himself reluctant to put his suspicions into words. “She certainly has a nasty reputation. And I suspect it’s well earned.”

“It’s odd, but he sounds rather like the man I saw at Covent Garden Market this morning.”

Sebastian turned to look at her. “What man in Covent Garden?”

“I thought I told you about him. It was my coster guide, Lucky Gordon, who noticed him first. He was simply standing there, staring at me. But when I tried to approach and ask what he wanted, he disappeared.”

Sebastian went to lay the sleeping babe in his cradle, then stood for a moment, watching the firelight dance over the child’s soft cheeks and the gentle curve of his dusky lashes. And he knew it again, that chilling whisper of fear, that shuddering awareness of how fragile and vulnerable were the lives of those he loved.

“What?” asked Hero, watching him.

“As of dawn this morning, I had never heard of Priss Mulligan. So why would she have set someone to follow my wife?”

“Why would anyone?”

When he remained silent, she said, “You think Diggory Flynn works for Oliphant, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

She tilted her head to one side, and he knew what she was thinking-that his history with Oliphant was tempting him to see connections where they didn’t necessarily exist. He acknowledged that she might even be right.

But he didn’t think so.

She said, “Why would Oliphant set someone to watch me? Not you, but me?”

Sebastian went to where a decanter stood warming on a table before the fire and poured himself a glass of brandy. “It’s a game he plays; a game of intimidation. He wants people to know they’re being watched-and that the people they love are vulnerable. He enjoys making them afraid.”

“I would think he’d know you better than that-know that you don’t frighten easily.”

He watched her head bend as she stroked the cat, watched the firelight catch the subtle auburn glints in the heavy fall of her hair and glaze the angle of her cheekbone. He wanted to tell her that there were things Oliphant knew that she did not, and that sometimes the innocent are made to pay for the sins of the guilty. But all he said was, “The thought of anything happening to you or Simon scares the hell out of me.”

She lifted her head to meet his gaze, her features calm and still. “Nothing is going to happen to us.”

He took a long pull of his brandy and felt it burn deep in his chest. “Your father thinks I’m putting you at risk simply by looking into Preston’s murder.”

“Well, that’s something you two have in common, then-needlessly worrying about Simon and me, I mean.” She shifted her hand to scratch the cat beneath his chin, the feline’s eyes slitting with pleasure as he lifted his head. “Jarvis tells me Charles I’s head is missing, as well as the coffin strap.”

Sebastian went to stand before the fire. “Saw him, did you?”

“This afternoon, when Simon and I were visiting my mother. He’s not exactly pleased with you, is he?”

“Is he ever?”

A gleam of amusement showed in the gray eyes that were so much like her father’s. “No.” The amusement faded. “Do you have any idea yet how the theft from the royal vault figures into Preston’s murder?”

“Oh, I’ve plenty of ideas. And not a bloody clue which-if any-of them are right. I don’t even know who brought the coffin strap to the bridge that night. It could have been the original thief, or a dealer, or the killer-assuming that the thief or dealer isn’t the killer. Or even Preston himself.”

“Why would Preston be carrying it?”

Sebastian shrugged. “Perhaps he was taking it to show someone. Or perhaps he’d just purchased it.” He tilted his head back and moved it slowly from side to side in a futile attempt to loosen some of the tension he carried in his neck. “If the strap had been left beside the body, I might think the killer intended it as some sort of statement or warning. But it wasn’t; it was lying in weeds down near the creek, as if someone had simply dropped it.”

“Perhaps the killer did leave it with the body. Only, someone else came along and picked it up. Someone who then dropped it in fright. Or perhaps the killer was stealing it and he dropped it.”

“I can see Thistlewood or Priss Mulligan taking the coffin strap. But not Oliphant or Wyeth.”

She smiled. “You complained last night that you had almost no suspects. Now you have almost too many: the unknown relic thief; a vindictive ex-governor; a scorned Army captain; a rival curiosity collector; and a nasty secondhand dealer.”

“Don’t forget the banker who quarreled with Preston right before he was killed. I haven’t even been able to speak with him yet.”

“What’s his name? Do you know?”

Sebastian nodded. “Henry Austen. I spoke to his sister.”

“You mean, Jane Austen?”

“Yes. You know her?”

“I met her a few times at a friend’s salon last year. She’s a deceptively clever woman with a devastating wit.”

“She is indeed. She tells me Preston was angry with her brother over something Austen’s wife said.”

“Sounds like a rather silly argument over which to kill someone.”

“True. Yet men have killed for less. And he is the last person known to have seen Preston alive.” Sebastian drained his glass and set it aside. Then his gaze fell on the set of three slim blue volumes that rested on the table beside her chair, and he said, “Don’t tell me you’re reading this new anonymous novel as well?”

“My mother gave it to me. It’s quite entertaining.” She scooped the cat up into her arms and laughed out loud when he stiffened and widened his eyes in indignation. “And I’ve found the perfect name for you,” she told the cat. “It precisely captures your charming blend of arrogance and aloofness-and your impressive handsomeness, of course.”