Читать книгу Explosive - Charlotte Mede - Страница 7
Chapter 2
ОглавлениеBlackburn stared hard, hard as the head-splitting pain on his right side allowed.
She was beautiful, his angel of death, sporting a small ladylike pistol in an admirably steady grip. Silhouetted in the light of the open doorway a few feet away, he could see that her eyes were the color of the North Sea and just about as cold.
“Sit up.” She left the door partially ajar, her glance quickly appraising.
“I suppose it would make for an easier target.” He struggled to an upright position, the pain giving way as the room slowly stopped spinning. The light from the outside hallway lit the small space, bare except for his bunk and a wooden stool in the opposite corner.
Like a general surveying a battlefield, she walked toward him out of the dimness, taking dispassionate note of his physical condition, his securely bound hands and legs. “Such wit.” Her soft low voice dripped contempt, strangely enticing given the circumstances. “You probably should not have put up such a struggle, Blackburn. Three men to one are hardly in your favor.”
“The opiate did help those in your camp,” he said. “And I’m assuming my attackers were your emissaries.” The footpads had posed very little challenge as a matter of fact. But then if he hadn’t let them wrestle him to the ground and into this small corner of hell, he would not be facing Devon Caravelle at this moment, a critical link to one of the most dangerous men in Europe—and a most convenient outlet for his own plans for vengeance.
“Now I suppose you’re here to tell me how I might be of help?” He scanned her face with a professional expertise, searching for something he couldn’t yet define.
She refused to be pushed into any quick answers. “In good time.”
The diffuse light cast a sheen on her dark auburn hair and threw into sharp relief the delicate planes of her face. Her English appeared perfect and unaccented. And she was clearly accustomed to brandishing revolvers. Without lowering her pistol, she moved in closer. Her cloak was brown, deliberate camouflage for physical assets tempting enough for a Jesuit. Every time she moved, he heard the unmistakable shimmer of the silk she wore underneath. He knew her type—and her world—all too well.
She shrugged in his direction, her brow raised in reproof. “For your own sake, I caution you. I can and will use this revolver should the situation dictate.”
Blackburn didn’t doubt it. “What threat do I possibly present?” He held up his bound hands for her inspection. His jaw must be sporting at least a few bruises as well, now dark with two days’ stubble. De Maupassant’s henchmen weren’t known for their subtlety, causing Blackburn to wonder if this beautiful ambassador knew the extent of their cruelty. He expected at least a flicker of revulsion, but her eyes remained unmoved.
“True—but you do seem to look after yourself remarkably well.” Her lips curled over the last word as she took a few steps away from him.
Blackburn accepted the backhanded compliment with a small smile, waiting for her next move. Seated on the bunk, held immobile by thick ropes, he felt a strange euphoria, a coiled tension that he hadn’t felt in a long while, an edginess that perversely cut through some of the guilt and darkness that marked too many of his days. Devon Caravelle was not exactly as he had expected.
He watched the slow pulse at the base of her slender neck above the rise of rounded breasts no amount of brown wool could conceal. She did an admirable job of hiding her thoughts, those wide compelling eyes revealing little except a penetrating acuity. She was her father’s daughter, there was little doubt.
Yet there was a strange vulnerability about her as she stared at him over the gun, her expression a closed prison door. “I’m going to tell you what I want from you, Blackburn. I trust you’re ready to hear it.”
Bloody hell, he couldn’t wait.
But keeping his face expressionless, he merely shrugged. “A cynic would conclude that everybody wants something. It’s an unfortunate aspect of human nature I’ve learned.”
“Indeed.” Devon Caravelle’s delicately rounded chin lifted higher.
He smiled inwardly. This was exactly what he and the Duke of Wellington had planned—for Devon Caravelle to come to them. They both knew how useless her father, Brendan Clifton, had turned out to be, refusing to be of help to St. James’s Palace, throwing his lot in with neither the English nor the French. And how convenient it had been for him to send his daughter away to the music conservatory that last year, as the dangerous currents of the war between England and Napoleon swirled about him. Right before his murder.
Blackburn felt his gut tighten like a bow. Despite those measures, Clifton had left his daughter with a highly volatile and explosive legacy.
She was the only person alive who had a chance of accessing the dangerous truth embedded in Beethoven’s Eroica score.
With that thought, the pounding in Blackburn’s head resumed. In response, he attempted to stretch the cramped muscles in his shoulders as Devon Caravelle instantly retrained her pistol, aiming precisely for his heart.
“I’m just getting comfortable,” he reassured her, surprised at her nervous reaction, the tightening of her lips as she concentrated her gaze on him.
“That’s precisely my concern. The last thing I want you to feel is comfortable.” The words dripped acid.
She stood limned in the dimness, and he focused on the slender but strong gloved hand that gripped the pistol.
“You’re not going to kill me—at least just yet,” he played along with the game. “Are you preparing me for another bout with those henchmen? I suppose I should be trembling in my boots.” What he really wanted to ask her was why she had aligned herself with a man as cruel and dangerous as de Maupassant.
“It can be arranged,” she said dryly, seemingly secure in her position as the Frenchman’s mistress and musical protégée.
“For Christ’s sake, put down the gun and relax. I’m not going anywhere,” he ground out. Blackburn saw her eyes widen in momentary surprise but the pistol didn’t waver.
“I’ll relax when this is over, thank you.” She wet her lips seemingly unaware of his gaze following the sensuous curve of her mouth.
He tried to keep the grimness from his tone. “When what’s over? You’re taking a rather long time to get to the point.”
“That’s my prerogative given the circumstances.”
“Circumstances can change quickly.” Blackburn watched her remarkable eyes darken at his comment. He would probably bed her, he thought cynically, but with purpose in mind. Here was just another link in the chain of de Maupassant’s machinations, another weapon to get to the Eroica and the cipher that was the ultimate prize. A beautiful, sensual package that possessed the secrets of untold power and of England’s and Europe’s potential devastation.
“There is a chair available.” He gestured with bound hands to the stool in the corner.
“I prefer to stand.”
“You have the pistol, so naturally, whichever you prefer.” They eyed each other. Blackburn shifted slightly on the bunk and sensed the apprehension in the tight set of her shoulders.
He itched to get his hands on her. “You’re probably not going to shoot me, or you would have done so already. What is it that you want?” he asked instead, lowering his gaze, completely at ease staring down the barrel of a gun.
She made a small sound, a clearing of her throat, giving his question some consideration. “I sense that like most men, you have little patience.” The words were said in a low contralto in the gloominess of the cell. “And yet, I have my suspicions that you already know what I want.”
There it was, the gauntlet, thrown down in challenge. He regarded her impassively, all the while wondering how she would go about asking him—forcing him—to work with her on deciphering the score.
Without turning her back to him, she walked slowly toward the stool in the corner and dragged it to the center of the room before sitting down and carefully arranging her skirts as though the action was the most important thing in the world at the moment. She was a fine actress. And why wouldn’t she be? He was in the presence of the daughter of one of Europe’s most accomplished mathematicians and cryptologists. As a worldly woman who had traveled among Europe’s most bohemian revolutionary circles, she was certainly no innocent waiting here in this cell for his reluctant cooperation.
And her eyes were spectacular, as compelling as gathering storm clouds, he noted distractedly, while continuing to work surreptitiously to free his bound hands and legs.
“You’ve gone to considerable trouble to have me transported here—what with the drama of opiates and ruffians, so you’ll forgive my impatience,” he said trying to get her to say the words he wanted to hear.
She looked at him carefully, smoothing the leather of her gloves as though the motion helped her come to an important decision. “I believe I’ll explain what you need to know later,” she said slowly and unpleasantly. And with her free hand pulling her cloak more closely around her she made a motion as though to rise from her seat. “In the interim, you’re coming with me.”
“Just like that?” He raised a brow speculatively. “This is becoming more and more diverting, so much so that I can almost forgive the brutality of the previous evening. Now tell me,” he leaned forward slightly as though being asked to raise the stakes in a polite game of whist, “why should I?”
“I have something you want.”
“You are an attractive woman…”
Anger steeled her voice as she rose from the stool in a swirl of wool and silk. “Don’t be obtuse. There’s much more at stake here which I’m sure you know.”
Blackburn shrugged, feeling implausibly relaxed in his rumpled evening clothes. Despite an urge to destroy the woman in front of him, along with the man who sent her, he was actually enjoying himself. “Why don’t you tell me what it is, then,” he asked almost gently, as if he’d ever been denied anything in his life. “I’m getting rather bored. I should like to think you’d get to the point in the next minute or so.”
“You actually believe there’s cause for humor here?” She cocked her pistol for emphasis, the silver glinting in the dim light. “I suggest that you take this meeting quite seriously, Blackburn, because you have a critically important decision to make. You either go with me willingly tonight—or I leave you here to languish indefinitely. I somehow suspect these accommodations are much too damp and dark for your liking.”
“I’m truly intrigued now, Mademoiselle.” She couldn’t mistake the mockery in his voice.
“Introductions are hardly in order,” she conceded, her full lips tightening, as though preparing herself for an unwelcome task. “I know who you are. And you, no doubt, know who I am. More important, we’re after the same thing.”
“And that might be what exactly?” If Devon Caravelle had been watching more closely, she would have noticed that his smile didn’t reach his eyes.
“Beethoven’s Eroica score. I know who has it.”
The unspoken name swung between them like a noose.
Le Comte Henri de Maupassant.
His eyes never left her face, but his expression was deliberately indolent, almost careless of the situation. “So you may be aware of the Eroica—but why should I be impressed? First off, you’re Brendan Clifton’s daughter, Devon Caravelle. And second, it should be easy for Le Comte’s current mistress to ascertain its whereabouts.”
“I expected that you would know who I am,” she countered, not bothering to deny or confirm her position of mistress to the Frenchman.
It wasn’t as though he was expecting her to blush or demur, for God’s sake, yet Blackburn fought back a sense of irrational disappointment, as though her association with de Maupassant should in some way matter to him.
“The fact that you’re his new mistress is widely known—no news there,” he said harshly, giving himself a mental shake. “I also know that you’re probably with the Frenchman because of the score.” Surprisingly, the words left a bitter aftertaste.
She rose from the stool, switching the pistol to her left hand, her eyes guarded, her shoulders braced. “Those details are unimportant.” Each of her words was as hard as diamonds. “What is important is that you are—unfortunately for you—integral to discovering what lies entangled within some of the most beautiful music ever composed.”
“I think I’m beginning to understand now,” he interrupted. “You and Le Comte need me.” In this strange conversation, they had come to an impasse, the air between them crackling with a strange and uncomfortable current.
“That’s probably a fair assessment.” She kept a firm grip on the pistol and he knew that this encounter was costing her some effort. He could see it in the rigidity of her spine, the resolute set of her chin. Her every move was calculated, controlled and yet something about her suggested emotions, and a bold sensuality, held closely in check.
Her eyes pinned him to his place on the bunk. “I will secure the Eroica—which you have been unable to do so far—and then under my direction, at an undisclosed location, we will discover what secrets the score holds.”
Just like that.
Inwardly, Blackburn shook his head, amazed. The idea of supervision held little appeal for him, reinforcing his growing suspicion that Devon Caravelle was either arrogant beyond belief, reciting from a prepared agenda, or unwilling to recognize exactly whom she was up against. In response, he assumed his best imitation of the dissipated rogue, shifting his long legs out in front of him while loosening the cords binding his booted feet—as if he had all evening to discuss his options.
“But why should I?” he murmured insolently. Then lying through his teeth, he added casually, “Le Comte and I move in some of the same circles, though I can’t claim any direct association with him. And forgive me if this question is crude, but quite frankly, what do I get out of this?”
Devon Caravelle smiled without humor. “From what I understand, you’ve been after the Eroica for some time. So now’s your chance. And once our work is done, you can report back to your Wellington that all is well for all I care. What could be more straightforward for somebody like you?”
“Hardly straightforward—for somebody like me,” he said in a warm gravelly voice inviting confidence, yet at odds with the frost in his gaze. “Theoretically, if we were to do it your way, I would help you decipher the code and then have you relinquish the results to de Maupassant.” Blackburn’s gaze was mocking. “Doesn’t make much sense to me. And more important, why should I trust you—and the Frenchman?”
“Because you have no choice.” Her voice was steady, her stance arrogant. And suddenly, it was enough for Blackburn. He sat absolutely still, but his body thrummed with intensity.
“You clearly don’t know me very well, Mademoiselle.” His gaze fastened on her. “I always have a choice.”
The words held a veiled threat and, for the first time that evening, she backed away from him turning toward the door. Blackburn stopped thinking and surged from the bunk. He moved quickly, his next actions a blur as the loosened ropes binding his hands and legs were kicked aside. He spun her around so quickly that her feet left the ground as she was shoved roughly up against the door, slamming it shut, her pistol clattering uselessly to the floor. The room plunged into darkness.
Damn, it felt good.
He could sense every inch of her body stretched next to his. It would be far simpler to kill her now.
Holding her wrists high above her head, he heard her breath catch in her throat, a sound of vulnerability that he knew well. She was frightened, as well she should be. In the frozen silence and aware of how easily he could crush the life out of her, Blackburn took the time to examine his abductor at his leisure.
As his vision adjusted to the dimness, he could make out large gray eyes fringed with dark lashes gracing a face that was as unusual as it was lovely. His practiced look took in the defined cheekbones, the translucent skin that was a perfect foil for richly hued tresses and a mouth whose soft fullness suggested an ardent sensuality. And she had the enviable good sense not to scream. He could snap her neck in a heartbeat and she knew it.
He said in infuriatingly measured tones, “Now back to choices. You mentioned earlier that I have two. But let me amend your proposition by adding a third.”
“I shall scream for help.” Her eyes glittered in the darkness.
“No you won’t. You know that I can silence you and manage those two fellows hovering outside. Besides which, you wouldn’t get what you want. And neither would I.”
Blackburn knew she could feel his hard thighs and hips outlined by his tailored breeches. Deliberately, he moved even closer, enjoying her barely contained panic in the darkness—and something else. He was adept at recognizing a sensual response. His large hand held her two wrists as easily as a child’s. Her eyes moved to his wide mouth, his lips curved in a knowing smile.
“Let me go this instant,” she snapped, rigid as a washboard. “Get your hands off me.”
He smiled tauntingly. “I’m no longer holding on to you, Mademoiselle.” He offered strong beautifully shaped hands for her view. She flushed under his gaze, unable to move away, still blocked by his body and considerable height.
“Let me tell you about that third option,” he said looming ever closer, dispassionately aware of his own reaction, the swelling in his breeches that started the moment she’d walked into his cell.
Her full lips parted in expectation, agitation, or passion, he couldn’t tell. Devon Caravelle’s breaths came in shallow gasps as she was clearly unnerved by his nearness and the danger he represented. Blackburn didn’t envy her—positioned as she was between himself and Le Comte.
He said, “You get me the Eroica. We work on the score together. I decide what to do with the contents.”
“That’s impossible.”
“Nothing’s impossible.”
“You don’t trust me.”
“Why should I? You’re Le Comte’s newest bauble. It stands to reason your loyalty rests with him. No doubt he’s compensating you handsomely. And no doubt he sent you to secure my cooperation,” Blackburn said brutally, wondering what securing that cooperation might entail. His erection lengthened at the thought, primed as a pistol. “I will quadruple whatever he’s offered you.” It seemed to him that she flinched.
But she maintained a mutinous silence, thick lashes at half-mast over her spectacular eyes.
“While I find your antics charmingly cloak and dagger,” he continued, forcing himself to ignore the heaviness in his groin, “I have neither the time nor the patience to work under your direction, as you charmingly suggested earlier. Now you’re the one who hasn’t a choice.”
Her face paled from cream to alabaster. “Look, you don’t understand.”
“Of course I do, Mademoiselle,” he said callously. For some reason he didn’t fight the urge to touch her and flicked a careless finger along the smoothness of her cheek. Her breaths came even faster. “It’s quite simple. You work for me against Le Comte.”
“And if I refuse?” She suppressed a shiver as she felt his caress.
In response, he forced her against the door, resting one hand casually over her head and effectively caging her with his body. One fraction closer and she would feel another kind of physical threat. “I don’t think you will, Mademoiselle. I’m sure a damp prison cell is as much to your liking as it is to my liking, wouldn’t you say?”
“You mean to throw me to the magistrates?” She was so close he felt the warmth of her breath in the dark.
“Yes, I would—tonight, as a matter of fact. They’d be more than pleased to stretch your neck. Capturing the daughter of an infamous traitor; moreover, a daughter who was involved in her father’s rather important work? And of course, I would be available to testify that you had me abducted in order to help you with your treasonous plans.”
It was as if he had cracked her veneer, hit a nerve. “Get away from me.” Her voice filled with pain and an odd undertone of protectiveness. “Don’t dare ever mention my father again.”
“As you wish.” He turned to block the door with his back, arms crossed over his chest. “But I believe I have your answer. And don’t worry, Mademoiselle. De Maupassant will never know you’re working against him, rather than for him—as long as you cooperate with me, of course. And for this deception you will be reimbursed handsomely. Don’t look so shocked,” he added, watching her rooted to her spot in the gloom. “I’m sure you’re accustomed to treachery for the right price. So—you will have the score for me tomorrow evening at the recital your generous benefactor is hosting to showcase your considerable charms.”
Devon Caravelle took a breath and raised her chin. “What if he refuses to relinquish it to me?”
Blackburn’s expression was derisive as he deliberately surveyed her form, from her glorious hair and mobile mouth to the slender body alluringly hidden beneath swatches of brown wool.
His voice was rough, his breath soft on her ear. “Seduce him—what else? Return to your lover tonight and beguile, captivate, and lie as fluently as I’m sure you can. Simply pretend all is going according to plan.”
His smile was distinctly unpleasant as he pulled himself away from her. “Now go—because I’m sure he’s expecting you.”
It was as though the impossible had occurred and he had shocked her, her profile frozen ivory. “You disgust me,” she whispered, gathering her cloak and grabbing the latch of the door to pull it open.
“Don’t forget your pistol.” He picked it up from the floor and held it out to her. She quickly snapped up the weapon with a gloved hand, afraid to touch him. But Devon Caravelle didn’t call for the guards.
“Tomorrow evening,” said the Marquess of Blackburn throwing her an indifferent glance, as though getting ready to depart from an unexpectedly tedious reception rather than walk out of a prison.
For the briefest of seconds he wondered whether he should let her go back to Le Comte. The thought of their being lovers did more than usual to fuel his natural cynicism. Bloody hell, he wanted a drink, wanted to sit by himself and cool his response toward a woman who could easily destroy him. It was time for his exit as he obviously needed a brandy to clear the pounding in his head.
He stepped over the threshold into a narrow hallway, consciously leaving the shadow of Devon Caravelle’s disturbing presence behind him.
“And do whatever you have to do to get the score—to keep the magistrates and the hangman at bay, of course,” he said by way of a parting shot. “I’m sure you know how, Mademoiselle. All too well.”