WHAT
PRICE LOVE? - EXCERPT
PROLOGUE
August,
1831
Ballyranna, County Kilkenny, Ireland
"I'm
looking for Paddy O'Loughlin."
Fronting
the bar counter in the Pipe & Drum, Lady Priscilla Dalloway
met the tavern keeper's arrested gaze, and wished she'd thought
to disguise her diction. But then she watched recognition
flare in Miller's eyes, and realized there would have been
no point. She'd worn an old habit and a wide brimmed hat,
but there was nothing she could do to disguise her face; a
veil wouldn't help gain Paddy O'Loughlin's confidence.
Miller,
a beefy man with a round, bald head, continued to study her
as if she might pose some exotic threat. Inwardly sighing,
she leaned confidingly on the counter. "He's not in any
trouble-I just want to talk to him." She'd softened her
already soft brogue, but Miller didn't budge or blink; she
infused a touch more persuasiveness into her tone. "It's
just that my brother's now filling the position from which
Paddy recently retired, and I wanted to know what Paddy could
tell me about the work and the place."
That
was all she was willing to reveal. She wanted reassurance
as to Rus's well-being, but she wasn't prepared to air the
Dalloway's dirty linen before Miller, no doubt as big a gossip
as his peers.
Miller
frowned, and glanced around.
It
was two o'clock; there were three workmen further along the
bar, and a few scattered at tables, all glancing surreptitiously
at the Quality miss who'd walked into their den. The bar room
windows were small, their glass thick and wavy, admitting
little light; the room was a medley of browns and greens,
dingy and drab, with only the gleam of glasses and bottles
on the wall behind the counter to fix the eye.
Miller
eyed his other customers, then set aside the glass he'd been
drying, stepped closer and lowered his voice. "You're
saying young Lord Russell's up and taken Paddy's old job?"
Pris
managed not to hiss through her teeth. "Yes. I thought
perhaps Paddy could tell me about Lord Cromarty's stables."
She shrugged as if it were perfectly normal for an earl's
son to become an assistant stableman, and equally mundane
for his sister to ride for two hours across country to inquire
of the previous incumbent as to the conditions of his erstwhile
employment. "I'm just curious."
And
concerned over why a man like Paddy O'Loughlin would leave
what should have been an excellent position. He was a local
legend when it came to horses and horseflesh; he'd helped
train a number of exceptional racehorses over the years. She
hadn't met him, but had known he lived outside this village,
known therefore where best to inquire for him.
Miller
studied her, then angled his head at a large man in workman's
garb nursing a pint at a table in the dimmest corner. "You'd
best ask Seamus O'Malley. He and Paddy were best mates."
Pris's
brows flew up at Miller's use of the past tense.
He
nodded portentously. "Anyone can help you, it's Seamus."
He stepped back, adding, "And if it were my brother in
Paddy's old shoes, I'd ask."
Concern
tranformed to outright anxiety. Pris straightened. "Thank
you."
Turning,
she regarded Seamus O'Malley. She knew nothing of him. Quitting
the bar, she walked across the room.
O'Malley
sat hunched over a table, nursing a pint pot between work-roughened
hands. Pausing beside him, she waited until his gaze rose
to meet hers. He blinked owlishly at her, clearly recognizing
her but at a loss as to why she was standing there.
Quietly
she stated, "I'm looking for Paddy O'Loughlin - Miller
suggested I speak with you."
"He
did?" Seamus shifted to peer at the bar.
Pris
didn't turn to see. When, presumably reassured by Miller's
nod, Seamus looked back at her uncertainly, she pulled out
the second chair at the table and sat. "Miller said you
knew Paddy well."
Seamus
eyed her warily. "Aye."
"So
- where is he?"
He
blinked, then went back to staring into his almost full pot.
"Don't know." Before Pris could prod, he went on,
"None of us do. He was here one night, a sennight gone
it was, and he ambled off home come closing time, like he
always did. But he never reached home." Seamus glanced
at her, briefly met her eyes. "The path to his cottage
runs through the bogs."
Pris
tamped down a sharp surge of panic, tried to think of some
other interpretation, and couldn't. "You're saying he
was murdered?"
Returning
his gaze to his glass, Seamus shrugged. "Don't know,
do we? But Paddy'd walked that path ten thousand times, man
and boy, and he weren't even drunk - barely tipsy. Hard to
swallow that he'd lose his way and die like that, but no one's
seen hide nor hair of him since."
Cold
dread welled in Pris's stomach. "My brother, Lord Russell,
has taken Paddy's old job." She heard her voice, steady
but distant, was aware of Seamus's instant concern. "I
wanted to ask Paddy about Cromarty's stables. Did he say anything
about the place - about the people, the work?"
The
expression on Seamus's face was a disturbing mix of worry
and sympathy. He sipped, then in a low voice offered, "He'd
worked there for three years. Liked the place well enough
at first, said the horses were fine, but recently…he said
there was something going on that he didn't hold with. That's
why he left."
"Something
going on?" Pris leaned forward. "Did he say anything
more? Give any hint as to what the something was?"
Seamus
grimaced. "All he said was that that devil Harkness -
he who's head stableman at Cromarty's - was in it up to his
ears, and that it, whatever it was, involved some register."
She
frowned. "Register?"
"Paddy
never said what register nor how it mattered." Seamus
contemplated his beer, then looked at Pris. "I've heard
tell your brother's a great one with the horses, but I ain't
never heard him spoken of as one who'd tip a man the wink,
nor be likely to nobble a horse, nor be involved in any other
shady dealing. Lord knows Paddy weren't no saint, but if there
were something going on at Cromarty's stables he couldn't
stomach, then seems likely your brother might have difficulties
with it, too."
Pris
stared at him. "And now Paddy's gone."
"Aye.
I'm thinking it might be wise to let your brother know."
Seamus hesitated, then more gently asked, "He's your
twin, ain't he?"
Pris
nodded. "Yes." She had to work to strengthen her
voice. "And thank you. I'll tell him about Paddy."
She
started to rise, then paused and fished in her pocket. Standing,
she slipped a silver sixpence onto the table. "Have another
pint - for Paddy."
Seamus
looked at the sixpence, then grunted softly. "Thank ye.
And you tell that brother o'yours to watch himself."
Pris
turned and strode out of the tavern.
*
* *
Two
hours later, she swept into the back parlor of Dalloway Hall.
Her
paternal aunt Eugenia, a widow who had come to live with the
family on Pris's mother's death seven years before, sat on
the chaise calmly tatting. Curled on the windowseat, Adelaide,
Eugenia's orphaned goddaughter, now her ward, had been idly
perusing a novel.
A
pretty girl with glossy brown hair, two years younger than
Pris's twenty-four, Adelaide looked up, and set aside her
book. "Did you learn anything?"
Grimly
stripping off her gloves, Pris headed for the ladies' desk
by the windows. "I have to write to Rus immediately."
Eugenia
lowered her needles. "From which I take it you discovered
something disturbing. What?"
Pris
dropped her gloves on the desk, swung the heavy skirts of
her habit around and sat in the chair angled before the desk.
Both Eugenia and Adelaide knew where she'd gone, and why.
"I'd expected to hear that Paddy had had a fight with
the head stableman, or something of the sort. I'd hoped his
reason for leaving Cromarty's would be simple and innocuous.
Unfortunately, it's not."
Across
the faded splendor of the Aubusson rug, Pris met Eugenia's
wise eyes. "Paddy spoke of something going on at Cromarty's
that he couldn't stomach - that's why he left. And now he's
disappeared - his friends think he's been done away with."
Eugenia's
brown eyes widened. "Great heavens!"
"Oh,
dear!" Hand rising to her throat, Adelaide stared.
Turning
to the desk, Pris opened the drawer. "I'm going to write
to Rus and tell him he has to leave Cromarty's employ at once.
If there's something bad happening with the horses - well,
you know Rus. He'll get involved trying to put it right. But
I don't want him in any danger, not if it's the sort where
people disappear, never to be heard of again. If he can't
bear to come home and deal with Papa, then he'll have to look
for work training horses for someone else."
To
her horror, her voice threatened to quaver; she paused to
draw a steadying breath.
Rus
had always been horse-mad. His one burning ambition was to
train an Irish Derby champion. While she didn't share his
enthusiasm, Pris fully understood the fervor of his dreams.
Unfortunately, their father, Denham Dalloway, Earl of Kentland,
had rigid views on what constituted an appropriate occupation
for his son and heir, namely the care and management of the
family estates. Breeding and training horses was all very
well for others, the implication being others of lesser degree,
but was an unacceptable occupation for the next Earl of Kentland.
Of
the earl's three sons, Rus was the least likely to be satisfied
with the role of county landowner as his sole focus in life.
Like Pris, he took after their mother, more Celt than English,
wild and dramatic and mercurially alive. Both twins could
see the benefit in the estate being well-managed, but estate
management lacked allure. Luckily, their nearest brother,
Albert, now twenty-one, took after their father - solid, dependable,
stoic; Albert delighted in and would unquestionably excel
at all aspects of estate management.
Pris,
Rus and Albert had always been close, as indeed all the Dalloway
children were, but the other three, Margaret, Rupert and Aileen,
were much younger - twelve, ten and seven years old respectively
- more to be protected than viewed as co-conspirators. Even
before their mother had died, the three eldest siblings had
made a pact: Rus would do as their father wished and look
after the estate until Albert returned from university in
Dublin, then they would put their plan to their sire, that
Albert should manage the estate in Rus's name while Rus devoted
himself to establishing and running a racing stud.
It
was a prescription for the future the three of them could
happily follow and make work.
Two
months ago, Albert had returned from Dublin, his studies at
an end. Once he'd reacquainted himself with the estate, the
three had duly put their plan to the earl - who had rejected
it out of hand.
Rus
would continue to manage the estate. If he had a mind to it,
Albert could assist him. Regardless, however, no Dalloway
would ever stoop to indulging in horse breeding on a commercial
scale.
So
declared the earl.
Rus
had exploded. Pris and Albert quite saw his point; he'd curbed
his driving desire and done everything their father had asked
of him for seven years, and now felt he was owed a chance
to live the life he yearned to live.
The
earl had curled his lip and refused point blank to even consider
their scheme.
Words
had been exchanged, things said, wounds dealt on both sides.
Pushed beyond bearing, Rus had stormed out of Dalloway Hall
in a wild fury. He'd taken nothing more than what he could
cram in his saddlebags, and ridden away.
Seven
days later, just over three weeks ago, Pris had received a
letter to say he'd found work at Lord Cromarty's stables,
one of the major racing establishments in neighboring County
Wexford.
The
schism between her father and brother was now deeper than
it had ever been. Pris was determined to repair the rupture
in her family, but the wounds would take time to heal. She
accepted that. But with Rus gone, out of her world, for the
first time in her life she felt truly alone, truly bereft
as if some part of her had been excised, cut away. The feeling
was much more intense than when her mother had died; then
she'd had Rus beside her.
She'd
gone looking for Paddy seeking reassurance, something to soothe
her growing uneasiness over Rus's safety. Instead, she'd learned
Rus was in a situation where his life might come under threat.
Pulling
a sheet of paper from the drawer, she laid it on the blotter.
"If I write a note immediately, Patrick can ride over
and deliver it this evening."
"Actually,
my dear, before you write I daresay you should read this."
Pris
turned to see Eugenia extracting a letter from beneath the
endless fall of her tatting.
Eugenia
held out the missive. "From Rus. It was delivered with
the post after lunch. When he couldn't find you, Bradley gave
it to me rather than leave it on the salver in the hall."
Where
their father might see it. Bradley was their butler; like
most of the household, his sympathies lay with Rus.
Rising,
Pris took the letter. Returning to the desk, she broke her
brother's seal, then, sinking onto the chair, unfolded the
sheets, smoothed them, and read.
The
only sounds in the room were the repetitive clack of Eugenia's
needles, counterpointed by the tick of the mantelpiece clock.
"Oh,
no! What is it? What's happened?"
Adelaide's
agitated questions snapped Pris back to the present. Glancing
at Adelaide, then at Eugenia, taking in their worried expressions,
she realized her own must reflect her mounting horror.
"Rus
has gone to England - to Newmarket - with the Cromarty racing
string." She licked her suddenly dry lips and looked
again at the pages in her hand. "He says…." She
paused to steady her voice. "He says he's thinks Harkness,
the head stableman, is planning to run some racket that somehow
revolves about horse breeding while in Newmarket. He overheard
Harkness explaining to the head lad - Rus says he's a villainous
sort - about how the illicit undertaking worked, and that
it involves some register. He, Rus, didn't hear enough to
understand the scheme, but he thinks the register Harkness
was referring to is the register of all horses entitled by
their breeding to race on English tracks."
She
flipped over a page, scanned, then reported, "Rus says
he knows nothing of the details in the register, but if he's
ever going to become a breeder of racehorses, he should obviously
learn more about it regardless, and he'll be able to follow
it up as that register is kept at the Jockey Club in Newmarket."
She
turned the last page, then made a disgusted sound. "The
rest is full of platitudes assuring me he'll be safe, that
it'll all be prefectly fine, that even if there is anything
wrong, all he has to do is tell Lord Cromarty and it'll all
be right as rain, don't worry….and then he signs himself
'your loving brother off on an adventure'!"
Tossing
the letter on the desk, she faced Eugenia and Adelaide. "I'll
have to go to Newmarket."
Adelaide's
chin firmed. "We'll go to Newmarket - you can't go alone."
Pris
sent her a fleeting smile, then looked at Eugenia.
Her
aunt studied her, then nodded, and calmly folded her tatting.
"Indeed, dear. I see no alternative. Much as I love Rus,
we cannot leave him to deal with whatever this is alone, and
if there is some illicit scheme being hatched, you cannot,
to my mind, risk even a letter to warn him, in case it falls
into the wrong hands. You will need to speak with him. So!"
Folding
her hands on the pile of tatting in her lap, Eugenia looked
inquiringly at Pris. "What tale are we going to tell
your father to explain our sudden need for a sojourn in England?"
CHAPTER
1
September,
1831
Newmarket, Suffolk
"I
had hoped we'd have longer in reasonable privacy." Letting
the door of the Twig & Bough coffee shop in Newmarket
High Street swing shut behind him, Dillon Caxton stepped down
to the pavement beside Barnaby Adair. "Unfortunately,
the sunshine has brought the ladies and their daughters out
in force."
Scanning
the conveyances thronging the High Street, Dillon was forced
to smile and acknowledge two matrons, each with beaming daughters.
Tapping Barnaby's arm, he started strolling. "If we stand
still, we'll invite attack."
Chuckling,
Barnaby fell in beside him. "You sound even more disenchanted
with the sweet young things than Gerrard was."
"Living
in London, you're doubtless accustomed to far worse, but spare
a thought for us who value our buccolic existence. To us,
even the Little Season is an unwanted reminder of that which
we fervently wish to avoid."
"At
least with this latest mystery you have something to distract
you. An excellent excuse to be elsewhere, doing other things."
Seeing
a matron instructing her coachman to draw her landau to the
kerb ten paces further on, Dillon swore beneath his breath.
"Unfortunately, as our mystery must remain a strict secret,
I fear Lady Kershaw is going to draw first blood."
Her
ladyship, a local high stickler, beckoned imperiously. There
was no help for it; Dillon strolled on to her now stationary
carriage. He exchanged greetings with her ladyship and her
daughter, Margot, then introduced Barnaby. They stood chatting
for five minutes. From the corner of his eye, Dillon noted
how many arrested glances they drew, how many other matrons
were now jockeying for position further along the kerb.
Glancing
at Barnaby, doing his best to live up to Miss Kershaw's expectations,
Dillon inwardly grimaced. He could imagine the picture they
made, he with his dark, dramatic looks most commonly described
as Byronic, with Barnaby, a golden Adonis with curly hair
and bright blue eyes, by his side, the perfect foil. They
were both tall, well-set-up, and elegantly and fashionably
turned out. In the restricted society of Newmarket, it was
no wonder the ladies were lining up to accost them. Unfortunately,
their destination - the Jockey Club - lay some hundred yards
distant; they had to run the gauntlet.
They
proceeded to do so with the glib assurance that came from
untold hours spent in ton ballrooms. Despite his preference
for the buccolic, courtesy of his cousin Flick - Felicity
Cynster - over the last decade Dillon had spent his fair share
of time in the whirl of the ton, in London and elsewhere,
as Flick put it, keeping in practise.
In
practise for what was a question to which he was no longer
sure he knew the answer. Before his fall from grace and the
scandal that had shaken his life, he'd always assumed he would
marry, have a family, and all the rest. Yet while spending
the last decade putting his life to rights, repaying his debts
of social and moral obligation, and re-establishing himself,
his honor, in the eyes of all those who mattered to him, he'd
grown accustomed to his solitary existence, to the life of
an unencumbered gentleman.
Smiling
at Lady Kennedy, the third matron to detain them, he extricated
himself and Barnaby and strolled on, casting his eye along
the line of waiting carriages and their fair burdens. Not
one stirred the remotest interest in him. Not one sweet face
even moved him to curiosity.
Unfortunately,
becoming known as a gentleman with a hardened heart, one unsusceptible
to feminine enticements, had piled additional fuel on the
bonfire of the ladies' aspirations. Too many now viewed him
as a challenge, a recalcitrant male they were determined to
bring to heel. As for their mothers, with every year that
passed he was forced to exercise greater care, to keep his
eyes ever open for social snares, those traps certain matrons
set for the unwary.
Even
those select ladies with whom he occasionally dallied discreetly
in the capital weren't above hatching schemes. His last inamorata
had tried to convince him of the manifold benefits that would
accrue to him should he marry her niece. Said benefits had,
of course, included her fair self.
He
was beyond being outraged, beyond even being surprised; he
was close to turning his back on the entire subject of marriage.
"Mrs.
Cartwell, a pleasure to see you, ma'am." Taking the hand
the haughty matron extended, he shook it, bowed to the vision
of loveliness sitting beside Mrs. Cartwell, then stepped back
and introduced Barnaby. Always interested in people, Barnaby
exchanged platitudes with the lovely Miss Cartwell; cravenly
grateful, Dillon stood back and let him have the stage.
Mrs.
Cartwell was monitoring the exchange between her daughter
and Barnaby, the third son of an earl and every bit as eligible
as Dillon himself, with absolute concentration. Reduced to
the redundant, Dillon's mind returned to the matter he and
Barnaby had retreated to the Twig & Bough to discuss,
until they'd been ousted by the invading ladies. They'd chosen
the quieter shop catering to the genteel element rather than
the club coffee house favored by the racing fraternity for
the simple reason that the subject of their discussion would
set ears flapping and tongues wagging among the racing set.
Another
racing scandal was precisely what he was working to avoid.
This
time, he wasn't engaged on the wrong side of the ledger; this
time, he'd been recruited by the angels, to wit the all-powerful
Committee of the Jockey Club, to investigate the rumors of
race fixing that had started to circulate after the recent
spring racing season.
That
request was a deliberate and meaningful vote of confidence-a
declaration that the Committee viewed his youthful indiscretion
as fully paid for, the slate wiped clean. More, it was a clear
statement that the Committee had complete faith in his integrity,
and his discretion, in his devotion to the breeding and racing
industry that the Committee oversaw, and that he and his father
before him had for so long served.
His
father, General Caxton, was long retired, and Dillon was now
the Keeper of the Breeding Register and the Stud Book, the
two official tomes that together ruled the breeding and racing
of horses in England. It was in that capacity that he'd been
asked to look into the rumors.
Rumors
being rumors, and in this case issuing from London, he'd recruited
the Honorable Barnaby Adair, a good friend of Gerrard Debbington,
to help. Dillon knew Gerrard well, had for years, through
their connections to the powerful Cynster family; Barnaby
had recently assisted Gerrard in solving a troublesome matter
of murder. When Dillon had mentioned the possibility of a
racing swindle, Barnaby's eyes had lit.
That
had been in late July. Barnaby had duly investigated, and
in August had reported that while the rumors were there, all
were vague, very much of the strain that horses people had
expected to win had instead lost. Hardly a novel happening
in the racing game. There'd seemed little substance, and no
real fact behind the rumors. Nothing to warrant further action.
Now,
however, with the first races of the autumn season behind
them, something rather odd had occurred. Odd enough for Dillon
to summon Barnaby back.
In
the peace of the Twig & Bough, he'd related the details
of three separate attempts to break into the Jockey Club,
along with reports of some man asking about "the register"
in local alehouses, rough taverns catering to the dregs of
the town.
They'd
just finished discussing what was known of the inquisitive
man - an Irishman by his accent - when the influx of ladies
had rousted them. Dillon's office in the Jockey Club was their
current goal, the only place they might conclude their sensitive
discussion in some degree of privacy.
But
it was slow going. Escaping Mrs. Cartwell, they fell victim
to Lady Hemmings. As they left her ladyship, Dillon seized
the chance created by two groups of ladies becoming distracted
by their own gossip to quickly steer Barnaby between two carriages
and across the street. They lengthened their strides; by the
time the ladies noticed they'd slipped sideways and escaped,
they were turning into the long avenue flanked by tall trees
that led to the front door of the Jockey Club.
"Phew!"
Barnaby shot him a glance. "I see what you mean. It's
worse than in London-there's few others about to draw their
fire."
Dillon
nodded. "Luckily, we're now safe. The only females ever
glimpsed within these hallowed precincts are of the horse-mad
sorority, not the husband-hunting packs."
There
were no others, male or female, presently on the path leading
to the front door; easing his pace, he returned to their interrupted
discussion. "These break-ins - if someone's asking about
'a register', odds are they mean the Breeding Register, presumably
the target of our would-be thief. Nothing else within the
Jockey Club has any real value."
Slowing
to an amble, Barnaby looked at the red brick building standing
squarely at the end of the shady avenue. "Surely there
are cups, plates, medallions - things that would be worth
something if melted down? Isn't it more likely a thief would
be after those?"
"Most
of the trophies are plated. Their value lies more in what
they represent, not in their commercial worth. And this thief's
not a professional, but he is determined. Besides, it's too
coincidental - someone asking about 'the register,' and shortly
after, someone tries to break into the club where the one
item referred to in Newmarket as 'the register' resides."
"True,"
Barnaby conceded. "So how is the Breeding Register valuable?
Ransom?"
Dillon
raised his brows. "I hadn't thought of that, but such
a tack would be dangerous. Loss of the Breeding Register would
stop all racing, so using it in such a way, essentially holding
the entire racing fraternity to ransom, would very likely
prove an unhealthy experiment. If the Breeding Register disappeared,
I would expect to see it magically reappear within three days."
He glanced at Barnaby. "This industry isn't short of
those prepared to take the law into their own hands, especially
over a matter like that."
Barnaby
frowned. "But I thought you said it was the Breeding
Register our would-be thief was after?"
"Not
the Register itself - the set of books - but the information
it contains. That's where the gold lies."
"How
so?"
"That,"
Dillion admitted, "is something I'm not precisely sure
of - it's a function of what the information is to be used
for. However, in light of our earlier rumors, one possible
use leaps to mind."
He
met Barnaby's blue eyes. "Horse substitution. It used
to be prevalent decades ago, before they implemented the present
system. One horse would gain a reputation for winning, then,
in one race, the owners would substitute another horse, passing
it off as the previous winner, and the punters would lose.
The owners would be in league with certain bookmakers, and
would pocket a nice cut from the lost bets, as well as pocketing
even more from bets they or their friends laid against their
'champion' winning."
"Aha!"
Barnaby's eyes narrowed. "Unexpected losses - as have
been rumored to have occurred over the spring season."
"Just
so. And that's where the Breeding Register comes in. It's
an obligatory listing of a horse's bloodlines confirming its
right to race on English tracks under Jockey Club rules. Bloodlines
are fully documented in the Stud Book, while the register
is essentially a licensing listing - every horse has to be
approved and entered before being allowed in any race at any
track operating under the auspices of the Jockey Club. However,
along with the horse's name and general details, each register
entry contains a physical description supposedly sufficient
to ensure that a given horse, with given name, age, bloodlines
and racing clearance, can be distinguished from any other
horse."
Dillon
snorted. "Impossible to be a hundred percent certain
always, yet armed with those descriptions the race stewards
at the tracks monitor all the starters before every race,
and re-examine and verify all the placegetters after the race
has been run. That's why horses have to be entered for races
weeks in advance, so the stewards can be issued with copies
of the descriptions each starter should match."
"And
those descriptions come from the Breeding Register held here
in Newmarket?"
"Making
the stewards' copies is what my register clerks do, at least
during the racing seasons."
"So
why would our would-be thief be interested in the descriptions
contained in this register? How would it benefit him?"
"I
can think of two ways." Dillon looked ahead; they were
nearly at the Jockey Club's door. "First, if his master
was planning to substitute for a champion he owned, he'd need
to be sure what points feature most highly in the register
description, because the substitute horse would absolutely
have to possess those points to make the substitution work."
Halting
before the pair of shallow stone steps leading up to the club's
double doors, he faced Barnaby. "The second possibility
is that whoever has sent our thief is planning a new substitution,
but haven't yet located a suitable substitute horse. Scanning
the descriptions in the register would take time, but would
unquestionably identify the best possible match for a substitution."
He
paused, then added, "Bear in mind that in a substitution
racket, the substitute only has to pass the pre-race check,
which is the least detailed. Because the substitute finishes
out of the places, they're not subjected to the more stringent
check conducted after the race."
Barnaby
frowned. "So what we might have here is an already established
racket that ran certain substitutions last spring, and escaped
detection, plus an Irishman, presumably acting for some owner,
looking to gain access to the Breeding Register to facilitate
further substitutions."
Dillon
nodded. "And as to whether the former is directly linked
to the latter, logically there's no reason it has to be. But
I'd lay odds they're connected."
Barnaby
softly snorted. "It certainly has that feeling."
They
turned to the Club's front door. Both paused as through the
central glass pane they glimpsed the club's doorman, inside,
hurrying to reach for the latch.
Sweeping
the doors wide, the doorman bowed obsequiously, almost tripping
over his toes as he stepped aside to allow a lady to pass
through.
Not
just any lady. A vibrant vision in emerald green, she halted
on the top step, taken aback at finding herself facing a masculine
wall.
Her
head, crowned with a silky tumble of blue black curls, instinctively
rose. Eyes an even more intense emerald than her elegant gown,
rose, too; widening, they locked with Dillon's.
Barnaby
murmured an apology and stepped back.
Dillon
didn't move.
For
one incalculable moment, all he could see - all he knew of
the world - was that face.
Those
eyes.
Brilliant
green, glinting gold, they lured and promised.
She
was of average height; standing two steps up, those glorious
eyes were level with his. He was dimly aware of the classical
symmetry of her heart-shaped face, of perfect, very white
skin, fine, almost translucent, of delicately arched brows,
lush black lashes, a straight little nose and a mouth a touch
too wide. Her lips were full and blatantly sensual, yet instead
of disrupting the perfection of her beauty, those distracting
lips brought her face alive.
Like
a callow youth, he stood and stared.
Wide-eyed,
Pris stared back, and tried to catch her breath. She felt
like one of her brothers had punched her in the stomach; every
muscle had contracted and locked, and she couldn't get them
to relax.
Beside
her, the helpful doorman beamed. "Why, here's Mr. Caxton,
miss."
Her
mind whirled.
To
the gentlemen, he said, "This lady was asking after the
register, sir. We explained she had to speak with you."
Which
one was Caxton? Please don't let it be him.
Tearing
her gaze from the dark eyes into which she'd somehow fallen,
she looked hopefully at the Greek god, but fickle fate wasn't
that kind. The Greek god was looking at his sinfully dark
companion. Reluctantly, she did the same.
His
dark, very dark brown eyes that before had appeared as startled
as she felt - she doubted he often met ladies as dramatically
beautiful as he - had now hardened. As she watched, they fractionally
narrowed.
"Indeed?"
The
precise diction, the arrogantly superior tone, told her all
she needed to know of his social rank and background. The
flick of inherent power brought her head up, brought the earl's
daughter to the fore. She smiled, assured. "I was hoping
to view the register, if that's possible?"
Instantly
she sensed a dramatic heightening of their interest - a focusing
that owed nothing to the quality of her smile. Her gaze locked
on Caxton, on the dark eyes in which, unless she was sorely
mistaken, suspicion was now blooming, she mentally replayed
her words, but could see nothing to explain their reaction.
Glancing at the Greek god, she saw the alert look he sent
Caxton…it was her accent that had triggered their response.
Like
all the Anglo-Irish aristocracy, she spoke perfect English,
but no amount of elocution lessons would ever remove the soft
burr of her brogue, the stamp of Ireland on her tongue.
And
Rus, naturally, was the same.
Tamping
down the sudden surge of emotion - trepidation and expectation
combined - she looked again at Caxton. Meeting his eyes, she
arched a brow. "Perhaps, now you've returned, sir, you
could help me with my inquiries?"
She
wasn't going to let his beauty, or her unprecedented reaction
to it, get in her way.
More
to the point, his reaction to her gave her a weapon she was
perfectly prepared to wield. She would do anything, absolutely
anything without reservation to help Rus; running rings around
an Englishman and tying him in knots barely rated.
Dillon
inclined his head in acquiescence, and gestured for her to
re-enter the building - his domain. Her distracting smile
still flirting about her even more distracting lips, she swung
around, waiting for the doorman to step back before passing
through the portal and into the foyer.
Climbing
the steps, Dillon followed her in. He'd noted the calculation
that had flashed through those brilliant eyes, was duly warned.
An Irish lady asking to see the register? Oh, yes, he definitely
would speak with her.
Pausing
in the foyer, she glanced back at him, an innately haughty
glance over her shoulder. Despite the dictates of his intellect,
he felt his body react, yet as he met those direct and challenging
eyes, he had to wonder if she, her actions, her glances, were
truly calculated, or simply instinctive.
And
which of those options posed the bigger danger to him.
With
a distant, noncommittal smile, he gestured down the corridor
to the left. "My office is this way."
She
held his gaze for a heartbeat, apparently oblivious of Barnaby
at his shoulder. "And the register?"
The
suggestion in her tone had him fighting a grin. She wasn't
just fabulously beautiful; she had wit and a tongue to match.
"The latest volume is there."
She
consented to walk down the corridor. He followed by her shoulder,
half a stride behind. Far enough to be able to appreciate
her figure, her tiny waist and the curvaceous hips the prevailing
fashion for slightly raised waistlines did nothing to disguise,
to imagine the length of leg necessary to run from those evocatively
swaying hips to the surprisingly dainty half boots he'd glimpsed
beneath the hems of her emerald green skirts.
A
small flat hat sporting a dyed feather sat amid the thick
curls at the back of her head. From the front, only the tip
of the feather was visible, curling above her right ear.
He
knew enough of feminine fashion to identify both gown and
hat as of recent vintage, almost certainly from London. Whoever
the lady was, she was neither penniless nor, he suspected,
his social inferior.
"The
next door to the right." He was looking forward to having
her in his office, in the chair before his desk, where he
could examine and interrogate her.
She
halted before the door; he reached past her and set it swinging
wide. With a regal dip of her head, she moved into the room.
He followed, waving her to the chair facing his desk. Rounding
the wide desk set between two tall windows, he took the chair
behind it.
Barnaby
quietly closed the door, then retreated to an armchair set
to one side, opposite the bookcase in which the latest volume
of the Breeding Register resided. Briefly meeting Barnaby's
eyes, Dillon understood he intended being the proverbial fly
on the wall, leaving the questions to him, concentrating instead
on watching Miss…
Returning
his gaze to her, he smiled. "Your name, Miss…?"
Apparently
at ease in the straight-backed chair, comfortably padded with
arms on which she'd rested hers, she smiled back. "Dalling.
Miss Dalling. I confess I've no real idea of, nor interest
in racing or racehorses, but I was hoping to view this register
one hears so much about. The doorman gave me to understand
that you are the guardian of this famous tome. I'd imagined
it was on public display, like the Births and Deaths Register,
but apparently that's not the case."
She
had a melodic, almost hypnotic voice, not so much sirenlike
as that of a storyteller, luring you to believe, to accept,
and respond.
Dillon
fought the compulsion, forced himself to listen dispassionately,
sought, found and clung to his usual aloof distance. Although
uttered as statements, he sensed her sentences were questions.
"The register you're referring to is known as the Breeding
Register, and no, it's not a public document. It's an archive
of the Jockey Club. In effect, it's a listing of the horses
approved to run on those racetracks overseen by the club."
She
was drinking in his every word. "I see. So…if one wished
to verify that a particular horse was approved to race on
such tracks, one would consult the Breeding Register."
Another
question parading as a statement. "Yes."
"So
it is possible to view the Breeding Register."
"No."
He smiled, deliberately a touch patronizingly, when she frowned.
"If you wish to know if a particular horse is approved
to race, you need to apply for the information."
"Apply?"
At
last a straight, unadorned question; he let his smile grow
more intent. "You fill out a form, and one of the register
clerks will provide you with the required information."
She
looked disgusted. "A form." She flicked the fingers
of one hand. "I suppose this is England, after all."
He
made no reply. When it became clear he wasn't going to rise
to that bait, she tried another tack.
She
leaned forward, just a little. Confidingly fixed her big green
eyes on his face, simultaneously drawing attention to her
really quite impressive breasts, not overly large yet on her
slight frame deliciously tempting.
Having
already taken stock, he managed to keep his gaze steady on
her face.
She
smiled slightly, invitingly. "Surely you could allow
me to view the register - just a glance."
Her
emerald eyes held his; he fell under her spell. Again. That
voice, not sultry but something even more deeply stirring,
threatened, again, to draw him under; he had to fight to shake
free of the mesmerizing effect.
Suppressing
his frown took yet more effort. "No." He shifted,
and softened the edict, "That's not possible, I'm afraid."
She
frowned, the expression entirely genuine. "Why not? I
just want to look."
"Why?
What's the nature of your interest in the Breeding Register,
Miss Dalling? No, wait." He let his eyes harden, let
his deepening suspicions show. "You've already told us
you have no real interest in such things. Why, then, is viewing
the register so important to you?"
She
held his gaze unwaveringly. A moment ticked by, then she sighed
and, still entirely relaxed, leaned back in the chair. "It's
for my aunt."
When
he looked his surprise, she airily waved. "She's eccentric.
Her latest passion is racehorses - that's why we're here.
She's curious about every little thing to do with horse racing.
She stumbled on mention of this register somewhere, and now
nothing will do but for her to know all about it."
She
heaved an artistic sigh. "I didn't think those here would
appreciate a fluttery, dotty old dear haunting your foyer,
so I came." Fixing her disturbing green eyes on him,
she went on, "And that's why I would like to take a look
at this Breeding Register. Just a peek."
That
last was said almost tauntingly. Dillon considered how to
reply.
He
could walk over to the bookcase, retrieve the current volume
of the register, and lay it on the desk before her. Caution
argued against showing her where the register was, even what
it looked like. He could tell her what information was included
in each register entry, but even that might be tempting fate
in the guise of someone allied with those planning substitutions.
That risk was too serious to ignore.
Perhaps
he should call her bluff, and suggest she bring her aunt into
his office, but no matter how intently he searched her eyes,
he couldn't be sure she was lying about her aunt. It was possible
her tale, fanciful though it was, was the unvarnished truth.
That might result in him breaking the until-now-inviolate
rule that no one but he and the register clerks were ever
allowed to view the Breeding Register for some fussy old dear.
Who
could not be counted on not to spread the word.
"I'm
afraid, Miss Dalling, that all I can tell you is that the
entries in the register comprise a listing of licenses granted
to individual horses to race under Jockey Club rules."
He spread his hands in commisseration. "That's really
all I'm at liberty to divulge."
Her
green eyes had grown crystalline, hard. "How very mysterious."
He
smiled faintly. "You have to allow us our secrets."
The
distance between them was too great for him to be sure, but
he thought her eyes snapped. For an instant, the outcome hung
in the balance - whether she would retreat, or try some other,
possibly more high-handed means of persuasion - but then she
sighed again, lifted her reticule from her lap and smoothly
rose.
Dillon
rose, too, surprised by a very real impulse to do something
to prolong her visit. But then rounding the desk, he drew
close enough to see the expression in her eyes. There was
temper there - an Irish temper to match her accent. It was
presently leashed, but she was definitely irritated and annoyed
with him.
Because
she hadn't been able to bend him to her will.
He
felt his lips curve, saw annoyance coalesce and intensify
in her eyes. She really ought to have known just by looking
that he wasn't likely to fall victim to her charms.
Manifold
and very real though they were.
"Thank
you for your time, Mr. Caxton." Her tone was cold, a
shivery coolness, the most her soft brogue would allow. "I'll
inform my aunt that she'll have to live with her questions
unanswered."
"I'm
sorry to have to disappoint an old lady, however…"
He shrugged lightly. "Rules are rules, and there for
a good reason."
He
watched for her reaction, for some sign, however slight, of
comprehension, but she merely raised her brows in patent disbelief
and, with every indication of miffed disappointment, turned
away.
"I'll
see you to the front door." He went with her to the door
of his room, opened it.
"No
need." Briefly, she met his eyes as she swept past him.
"I'm sure I can find my way."
"Nevertheless."
He followed her into the corridor.
The
rigidity of her spine declared she was offended he hadn't
trusted her to go straight back to the front foyer if left
to herself. But they both knew she wouldn't have, that if
he'd set her free she'd have roamed, trusting to her beauty
to extract her from any difficulty should she be caught where
she shouldn't be.
She
didn't look back when she reached the foyer and sailed on
toward the front doors. "Good bye, Mr. Caxton."
The
cool words drifted over her shoulder. Halting in the mouth
of the corridor, he watched the doorman, still bedazzled,
leap to swing open the door. She stepped through, disappearing
into the bright sunshine; the doors swung shut, and he could
see her no more.
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