Читать книгу Scoundrel's Honor - Rosemary Rogers, Rosemary Rogers - Страница 8
CHAPTER TWO
ОглавлениеDIMITRI REMAINED SILENT as Herrick led him to the carriage and they settled into the soft leather seats. There was a small jerk as the driver urged the horses into motion, then they were traveling through the streets of St. Petersburg that were still crowded despite the late hour.
“Brandy?” Herrick inquired, pouring two glasses of the amber liquid and pressing one into Dimitri’s willing hand.
Taking a cautious sip, Dimitri lifted his brows in surprise. There was no mistaking the smooth ease with which the liquid fire slid down his throat.
“You must be anxious for my assistance if you are willing to share from your private cellar,” he said.
Herrick leaned back in his seat, his gaze hooded as he studied Dimitri.
“As I mentioned, I think our arrangement will be mutually beneficial.”
Dimitri could not prevent a small flare of curiosity. Herrick Gerhardt had devoted his life to Alexander Pavlovich. What private business could he possibly have?
“I am willing to listen to this…arrangement.”
“First I must bore you with a bit of family history.” Herrick swallowed his brandy and refilled his glass. “As you perhaps know I was born in Prussia to a respectable, albeit poor family. I was fortunate enough to travel to St. Petersburg to finish my education when I was just seventeen and eventually to capture the attention of Alexander Pavlovich. My elder cousin, on the other hand, chose to seek his fortunes in England where he wed and produced several children.”
“Fascinating.”
“One of my cousin’s daughters became a governess to a Russian family to teach the children English. She in turn wed a local furniture maker and had two daughters before she died.”
Dimitri tapped his finger against his glass, his brows pulled together in a frown.
“I presume this tedious story has an end?”
“As I was saying, there were two daughters, Emma and Anya Linley-Kirov,” Herrick continued, ignoring Dimitri’s growing impatience. “After their father was tragically killed by a poacher, Emma transformed her father’s workshop into a small coaching inn.”
Dimitri’s frown deepened. He adored women. All women. And it was well-known that any man who mistreated a female beneath his protection was a certain means to a brutal beating, if not death. Still, he could not deny he preferred to avoid those women with more spirit than sense.
In the end they not only brought misery to themselves, but those who cared for them.
“How very unconventional of her.”
“It was quite admirable of her,” Herrick corrected, easily sensing Dimitri’s lack of approval. “Unfortunately her considerable courage did not protect her from the nefarious gentlemen who stayed at her coaching inn for several days.”
“Nefarious?”
“When they left the inn they took Anya with them.”
Dimitri stilled, his attention fully captured. “The sister?”
“Yes.”
“How old is she?”
“She just turned sixteen.”
Draining the last of his brandy, Dimitri carefully set aside the glass, silently considering the unexpected revelation at the same time he accepted that his personal investigations were not quite so secret as he believed them to be.
“And Emma Linley-Kirov is certain she was taken by the gentlemen?” he demanded.
“Quite certain. Anya left a note explaining she was to become a famous actress.”
Dimitri was careful to keep his expression unreadable, even as his heart gave a jolt of recognition at the familiar ruse used by his father and his cohorts to lure young females from their homes.
“Did the note also mention the gentlemen were traveling to St. Petersburg?”
“A groom overheard the gentlemen discussing their return to the city.”
“And the woman is certain she would recognize them if she were to see them again?”
“Yes.”
Dimitri casually glanced out the window, not surprised to discover they had made a circuit of the Upper Nevsky and were nearly back to Pytor Burdzecki’s palatial home. There was never a moment when he was not acutely aware of his surroundings.
“What made you believe that I would have interest in your tragic, though not uncommon, tale?”
“It has not escaped my notice that you keep a very close watch upon Count Nevskaya and his associates.”
Dimitri absently studied the Anichkov Palace that had once housed Catherine’s favorite lover, Prince Potyomkin, and had been recently refurbished by Giacomo Quarenghi to house the Imperial Cabinet. Unlike many, he preferred the classical colonnade to the earlier, more flamboyant style.
Not that Czar Alexander had requested his opinion.
Grudgingly he turned his attention back to his companion.
“As you have no doubt surmised, the count is my father.”
A smile touched the older man’s lips as his gaze deliberately studied the elegant lines of Dimitri’s features, lingering on the aristocratic thrust of his nose and high, Slavic cheekbones.
“It is difficult to overlook the resemblance.”
Dimitri’s jaw hardened. He often used his considerable male beauty to his advantage, but he cursed the resemblance to the man who had brutally forced himself on a young, defenseless female.
“We share the same countenance, but make no mistake that is where the similarities end,” he said, his voice colder than a Siberian winter.
Herrick dipped his head in acknowledgment. “That is difficult to overlook as well, which is why your constant surveillance of the count piqued my interest. It was obvious you were searching for particular information.”
Dimitri was not pleased. He spied on others, they did not spy on him.
“You have an annoying habit of meddling in my private business.”
“It is my duty to meddle in the business of others.”
“You play a dangerous game, Gerhardt.”
Herrick shrugged, unperturbed by the threat in Dimitri’s soft voice.
“And you are intimately familiar with dangerous games, are you not, Tipova?” he asked. “The count would be most displeased to realize his bastard son suspects he is involved in illegal activities.”
Dimitri briefly considered the pleasure of tossing the older man into the nearby Fontanka Canal, then disregarded the notion. As pleasant as it might be to see Herrick’s impervious calm rattled, it was not worth the loss of his head.
Besides, there were more important matters to consider at the moment.
“What would you have of me?”
Herrick leaned forward, his dark eyes glittering in the moonlight.
“Meet with Emma Linley-Kirov. I truly believe the two of you are searching for the same answers.”
“I knew I was going to regret this meeting.”
PEERING OUT OF THE carriage window, Emma studied the pale stone building built with a columned portico in the center and two wings that spread along the canal. Although newly arrived in St. Petersburg, she would presume that the far side of the building was devoted to gentlemen lodgers. Why else would the small cluster of men be standing on the paved walk and keeping such a close watch on the passing traffic? On the other side was a more familiar coffee shop with several small tables and a back counter that held trays of tempting pastry that made Emma’s mouth water even at a distance.
“There it is,” she said, turning her head to meet her maid’s sour expression.
Yelena had firmly disapproved of Emma’s decision to meet with the Beggar Czar, Dimitri Tipova.
Of course, the elderly maid with a thatch of gray hair and slender body wrapped in a black cloak had disapproved of traveling to St. Petersburg, of accepting Herrick Gerhardt’s surprisingly warm welcome, and even of being sheltered by Herrick’s dear friend, Vanya Petrova in her beautiful mansion beside the Fontanka Canal.
Emma, on the other hand, was deeply grateful to the older man who had greeted her without a word of condemnation of her forward behavior and had promised he would do whatever possible to help her locate Anya.
“It does not appear to be a den of iniquity,” Yelena at last muttered. “Are you certain this is the proper address?”
Emma wrinkled her nose. “Appearances are too often deceptive, as I have so painfully discovered. It is rather public, however.”
“I should think it is public.” Yelena folded her gnarled fingers in her lap, her lips pinched together. “You cannot meet with a strange gentleman in private without so much as a proper introduction.”
Despite her raw nerves, Emma couldn’t contain her sudden chuckle. “I am about to request the assistance of the most renowned criminal in all of Russia and your concern is our lack of a proper introduction?”
The older woman sniffed. “I have a great number of concerns.”
Instantly contrite, Emma reached across the elegant carriage that Vanya had kindly insisted she use during her time in St. Petersburg, and patted her companion’s hand. Yelena was one of the very few people who had stood by her through the years.
“Forgive me, Yelena. I fear my nerves are in tatters. I did not mean to snap.”
Yelena’s expression immediately softened. “The past week would try the patience of a saint.”
Surely truer words had not been spoken, Emma acknowledged with a sigh. She did not wish to recall the grueling journey to St. Petersburg, or her sick trepidation as she had approached Herrick Gerhardt’s beautiful home to beg for his assistance.
It was enough to concentrate on today’s troubles.
Perhaps more than enough.
Pretending that her stomach was not cramped with fear, Emma managed a smile as the uniformed groom pulled open the carriage door.
“Remain here.”
Yelena frowned. “Emma—”
“We have been through this,” Emma interrupted. “The message was quite clear that I come alone. Besides, if I do not reappear then I shall need you to storm the fortress and rescue me.”
The maid pressed a shaking hand to her bosom. “Dear Lord.”
“I am merely teasing, Yelena. All will be well.” Keeping the strained smile intact, Emma allowed herself to be assisted from the carriage and headed for the door of the coffee shop. “Please God, let all be well,” she muttered beneath her breath.
Entering the coffee shop, she took the seat closest the window as the message had demanded. Thank goodness she had wrapped herself in a sturdy gown of dark gray that buttoned to her chin and brushed the wooden floor past her sensible leather boots. And that her honey hair was covered by a wool scarf her mother had knit. There was a roaring fire across the room, but so close to the door there was a distinct chill in the air.
Settling uncomfortably in the wooden chair, Emma cast a swift glance about the wide room, relieved that many of the tables were empty. There were two elegantly attired gentlemen playing chess by the fire, and a group of more roughly dressed men at a table that ran the length of the far wall, but she was quite alone in her corner.
Her appreciation for her solitude, however, began to wane as an hour passed, and then another. Where the devil was Dimitri Tipova? Had he invited her here just to see if she would risk her reputation by meeting with a notorious criminal? Was this a mere hoax at her expense? Or were Beggar Czars so busy they found it impossible to keep their appointments?
Tapping an impatient finger on the table, Emma found her anxiety hardening to a simmering anger.
She was accustomed to being treated with disrespect. She was even accustomed to being ignored by others who thought themselves above her. But she could not afford to waste an entire day on some ridiculous game. If Dimitri Tipova did not wish to be of service then he should at least have the decency to send his regrets.
On the point of rising to her feet, Emma was caught off guard when a large man approached her table and settled in a chair at her side.
“Well, well. Such a tender little morsel,” he husked, his face with its heavy jowls and beady blue eyes far too close. “I wonder if you taste as sweet as you look.”
Emma tilted her chin, shifting away from the hulking body attired in a faded green coat and the heavy boots of a laborer.
“Please move along.”
A cruel smiled curved his lips. “Perhaps I do not want to move along. Perhaps I intend to take you to the back room and sample your wares.”
Emma should no doubt have been terrified, but at the moment her temper was fully aroused and in no mood to endure the man’s rude behavior. Even if he was twice her size.
Grasping the cup of coffee she had bought in an effort to pass the time, she narrowed her gaze.
“Either you leave me in peace or I will pour this exceedingly hot coffee into your lap,” she warned. “Perhaps that will teach you not to impose your vile presence on unfortunate maidens who might cross your path.”
The intruder blinked, as if stupefied by her threat. “You…”
His lips had barely parted when another man joined them, this one far more slender, although the scar running down his cheek from his eyebrow to the edge of his mouth made him appear far more sinister. Her companion seemed to think so as well, as his face paled and sweat beaded his forehead.
“Semyon, return to the docks and make certain that the ship that arrived this morning is properly unloaded. You know how our employer dislikes unnecessary attention to our business.”
“Yes…of course.”
Stumbling to his feet, the man performed an awkward bow and headed for the door. Emma straightened from her seat as well, her temper not appeased.
She had been ignored for hours, and then rudely insulted by that brute. She had endured enough.
“Emma Linley-Kirov?” the man demanded.
“And you are?”
“Josef. I am here to escort you.”
Her lips tightened. So, Dimitri Tipova could not be bothered to greet her in person.
“Escort me to where?” she demanded.
The servant waved an indifferent hand toward a door at the back of the room, clearly unimpressed with his current duties.
“Merely to the private rooms upstairs. There is no need to be afraid.”
She squared her shoulders. “I am not afraid, I am furious. Do you know how long I have been waiting?”
A startled silence filled the entire room as Josef regarded her with astonishment.
“Dimitri Tipova is a very busy man,” he said, his tone chiding. “You are fortunate he agreed to meet with you at all.”
Emma sniffed, refusing to be intimidated. “Ah, yes, you cannot imagine how honored I am to be graced with a few moments of the Beggar Czar’s precious time.”
With a muttered curse, the slender man headed toward the back of the room.
“This way.”
Stiffly, Emma followed in his wake, acutely aware of the hard gazes trained in her direction. Josef pulled open the door and led her up a narrow flight of stairs, then reaching a landing, he motioned her toward a small room with a brocade sofa and two scrolled chairs set beside a marble fireplace.
“Wait here.”
Not bothering to turn, Josef continued toward a door on the opposite side of the landing, shoving it open and stepping through. Ignoring good manners, Emma remained poised on the landing, blatantly attempting to overhear the low conversation between Josef and whoever was waiting in the room.
“She arrived?” A man that Emma presumed was Dimitri Tipova demanded, his dark voice sending an odd tingle down her spine.
“Regrettably,” Josef muttered.
“Why regrettably?”
“The woman is sour enough to curdle milk.”
“No doubt she is concerned for her sister.”
“It is not concern that makes a woman into an overbearing shrew. She is the nasty sort who tosses out orders and expects them to be obeyed.”
“Naturally.” The gorgeous male voice held an edge of resignation. “I should have known Gerhardt would take pleasure in plaguing me with his old maid cousin. No doubt he is seated before a warm fire, relishing his peace while I am stuck with the harridan.”
Emma winced, then gritted her teeth, pretending she wasn’t wounded by the familiar mockery. She had not traveled to St. Petersburg to charm the local thieves.
Stepping over the threshold, she had a brief impression of a small study with bookshelves lining the walls and a porcelain stove set between two leather wing chairs. Then a tall man lifted himself from behind a heavy walnut desk and her mind abruptly refused to function.
He was just so absurdly beautiful.
Her stunned gaze traced the bronze perfection of his features. The wide, intelligent brow. The slender nose and full, sensual lips. The slash of his prominent cheekbones. The chiseled brows that were the same raven-black as his long hair pulled into a tail at his nape.
It was his eyes, however, that stole her breath.
An astonishing gold that shimmered in wicked temptation, they were surely the eyes of the devil.
Or perhaps a fallen angel.
All Emma knew for certain was that he was a compelling combination of lethal power and male sensuality that would make any poor woman go weak in the knees.
An odd, heated excitement fluttered in the pit of her stomach as that golden gaze flared over her tiny form. An excitement that was swiftly replaced with hollow disappointment as his lush lips twisted with a familiar male disapproval.
What did she expect, she mocked her temporary insanity?
That Dimitri Tipova might be unconventional enough not to judge her bold manner? That a man forced to survive in a harsh world was capable of understanding the need for her to do the same?
Thrusting aside the inane thoughts, Emma conjured the icy composure that was her only protection.
“I may be an old maid, but I at least possess a few manners,” she stated, her gaze never wavering from the unnerving golden eyes. “Something sadly lacking among you and your loathsome band of cutthroats.”
DIMITRI SHOULD HAVE been amused.
The tiny female wrapped in layers of wool barely came to his chin and weighed less than his wolfhound. To have her burst into his room and chide him as if he were a naughty child rather than the most dangerous man in St. Petersburg was absurd.
It wasn’t amusement he felt, however, as his gaze rested on the honey curls that peeked from her scarf to lie against the purity of her ivory skin and the steady hazel eyes that held unwavering strength.
There was something about her that challenged him at his most primitive level.
He wanted to loom over her until she dropped her bold gaze in silent defeat. He wanted to bluntly inform her that he was an unrepentant tyrant who expected immediate obedience from others.
He wanted to haul her against his body until the defiance faded from her beautiful eyes and her lush lips softened in invitation…
Thankfully unaware of the currents of prickling awareness that swirled through the air, Josef folded his arms over his chest.
“What did I say? Curdled milk,” he muttered.
Dimitri never allowed his gaze to stray from Emma Linley-Kirov’s stubborn expression.
“That will be all.”
“Are you certain? There is nothing more dangerous than an angry female.”
“Thank you, Josef, I believe you have done quite enough,” Dimitri dryly assured his friend, waiting for his servant to leave the room before he rounded the desk and perched on the corner.
His lips twisted as her gaze skimmed down his tailored, cinnamon jacket that he had paired with a cream satin waistcoat. He had tied his crisp cravat in an Oriental knot and a diamond the size of a thimble winked in the perfect folds. Clearly the woman had expected him to be a savage rather than the sort of sophisticated gentleman who could appear comfortable in the finest home.
“There is a saying that listeners rarely hear good of themselves,” he at last broke the silence.
An indefinable emotion flared through her eyes before she was jutting her chin in silent condemnation.
“I am indifferent to your opinion of me, sir—”
“Dimitri,” he smoothly corrected.
“I beg your pardon?”
“I am no gentleman as you have so graciously implied. You will call me Dimitri.”
Her lips tightened, whether in disapproval at the informality or at being given an order, it was impossible to determine.
“If you insist,” she grudgingly conceded.
“I do.”
“Can we please discuss my sister?” she snapped. “I have wasted enough of my day.”
Dimitri narrowed his gaze, shoving from the desk and prowling toward the woman regarding him with an imperious scowl. A surge of male satisfaction raced through him as she instinctively backed away from his approaching form, even as his more civilized nature was shocked by his fierce reaction to the delicate slip of a woman.
What the hell was wrong with him?
Herding her until she was pressed flat against the bookcase, he reached to grasp the shelves on either side of her shoulders.
“Perhaps we should discuss the nature of our—” his brooding gaze lowered to the tempting curve of her lips “—relationship, Emma.”
Heat flared beneath her ivory skin, but her eyes shimmered with rebellion.
“There is no relationship, merely a set of unfortunate circumstances that have forced us to join our resources for the time being.”
He pressed closer, caught by surprise when a raw awareness of her slender body seared through him. It was inconceivable. He enjoyed his women soft and vulnerable. The sort who depended upon him to offer support and protection. Not aging tartars who smelled of soap and starch.
“Then let me clarify the joining of resources.”
Her color deepened at the hint of huskiness in his voice. “What do you mean?”
“You desire my assistance, then you will have to follow my rules. Otherwise you can turn around and leave now.”
A tense silence filled the room he had recently converted into his private office, then without warning, Emma was shoving him away and pacing toward the window that overlooked the street.
Dimitri couldn’t deny a grudging respect for her courage. He knew only one other woman who would not have fainted or fled by now.
His mother.
The realization did nothing to ease his potent need to tame the prickly female. His mother’s courage had put her in an early grave.
“Fine.” Slowly turning, Emma regarded him with an unflinching gaze. “What are these precious rules?”
“The first is that I will not tolerate an ill-tempered termagant in my presence. If you cannot control your sharp tongue, then I will discover a means to tame it.”
Her eyes widened. “Tame? If you think I will tolerate being beaten by—”
He was moving before he could halt the impulse, his hands holding her face steady as he lowered his head and covered her mouth in a soft, coaxing kiss. He had intended to teach her a lesson in controlling her shrewish tongue, but at the first taste of her honeyed innocence his passions stirred, his body hardening. His hands tightened on her face as he deepened the kiss.
Just for a moment she softened against him, her lips parting in a sweet surrender. Then, with a choked moan, she jerked back, her eyes blazing with a fury that did not entirely mask her startled desire.
“Why, you…”
Well versed in the ways of women, Dimitri easily caught the hand she lifted to slap his face, bringing her fingers to his mouth.
“The second rule is no striking your master,” he could not resist taunting.
Flecks of gold smoldered in the hazel eyes. “Master?”
He kissed her slender fingers. “You are in desperate need of my assistance, which means that while you remain in St. Petersburg you are in my power.”
“I will not be treated as if I am a serf.”
“You will do precisely as I say and you will do so without complaint.”
She jerked her hand from his grasp, marching toward the door with her chin high and her back stiff.
“This is absurd.”
“If you walk out that door, Emma, I can assure you that you will never find your sister.”