Keep reading for a special excerpt from Joanna
Bourne’s
The Spymaster’s Lady
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SHE WAS WILLING TO DIE, OF COURSE, BUT SHE HAD
not planned to do it so soon, or in such a prolonged and
uncomfortable fashion, or at the hands of her own countrymen.
She slumped against the wall, which was of cut
stone and immensely solid, as prison walls often are. “I do not
have the plans. I never had them.”
“I am not a patient man. Where are the
plans?”
“I do not have—”
The openhanded slap whipped out of the darkness.
For one instant she slipped over the edge of consciousness. Then
she was back again, in the dark and in pain, with Leblanc.
“Just so.” He touched her cheek where he had hit
her and turned her toward him. He did it gently. He had much
practice in hurting women. “We continue. This time you will be more
helpful.”
“Please. I am trying.”
“You will tell me where you have hidden the
plans, Annique.”
“They are a mad dream, these Albion plans. A
chimera. I never saw them.” Even as she said it, the Albion plans
were clear in her mind. She had held the many pages in her hands,
the dogeared edges, maps covered with smudges and fingerprints, the
lists in small, neat writing. I will not think of this. If I
remember, it will show on my face.
“Vauban gave you the plans in Bruges. What did he
tell you to do with them?”
He told me to take them to England. “Why
would he give me plans? I am not a valise to go carrying papers
about the countryside.”
His fist closed on her throat. Pain exploded.
Pain that stopped her breath. She dug her fingers into the wall and
held on. With such a useful stone wall to hold on to, she would not
fall down.
Leblanc released her. “Let us begin again, at
Bruges. You were there. You admit that.”
“I was there. Yes. I reported to Vauban. I was a
pair of eyes watching the British. Nothing more. I have told you
and told you.” The fingers on her chin tightened. A new pain.
“Vauban left Bruges empty-handed. He went back to
Paris without the plans. He must have given them to you. Vauban
trusted you.”
He trusted me with treason. She wouldn’t
think that. Wouldn’t remember.
Her voice had gone hoarse a long time ago. “The
papers never came to us. Never.” She tried to swallow, but her
throat was too dry. “You hold my life in your hands, sir. If I had
the Albion plans, I would lay them at your feet to buy it
back.”
Leblanc swore softly, cursing her. Cursing
Vauban, who was far away and safe. “The old man didn’t hide them.
He was too carefully watched. What happened to them?”
“Look to your own associates. Or maybe the
British took them. I never saw them. I swear it.”
Leblanc nudged her chin upward. “You swear?
Little Cub, I have watched you lie and lie with that angel face
since you were a child. Do not attempt to lie to me.”
“I would not dare. I have served you well. Do you
think I’m such a fool I’ve stopped being afraid of you?” She let
tears brim into her eyes. It was a most useful skill and one she
had practiced assiduously.
“Almost, one might believe you.”
He plays with me. She squeezed her lids
and let tears slide in cold tracks down her cheeks.
“Almost.” He slowly scratched a line upon her
cheek with his thumbnail, following a tear. “But, alas, not quite.
You will be more honest before morning, I think.”
“I am honest to you now.”
“Perhaps. We will discuss this at length when my
guests have departed. Did you know? Fouché comes to my little
soiree tonight. A great honor. He comes to me from meetings with
Bonaparte. He comes directly to me, to speak of what the First
Consul has said. I am becoming the great man in Paris these
days.”
What would I say if I were innocent? “Take
me to Fouché. He will believe me.”
“You will see Fouché when I am satisfied your
pretty little mouth is speaking the truth. Until then . . .” He
reached to the nape of her neck to loosen her dress, pulling the
first tie free. “You will make yourself agreeable, eh? I have heard
you can be most amusing.”
“I will . . . try to please you.” I will
survive this. I can survive whatever he does to me.
“You will try very, very hard before I am
finished with you.”
“Please.” He wanted to see fear. She would grovel
at once, as was politic. “Please. I will do what you want, but not
here. Not in a dirty cell with men watching. I hear them breathing.
Do not make me do this in front of them.”
“It is only the English dogs. I kennel some spies
here till I dispose of them.” His fingers hooked the rough material
of her dress at the bodice and pulled it down, uncovering her.
“Perhaps I like them to watch.”
She breathed in the air he had used, hot and
moist, smelling of wintergreen. His hand crawled inside the bodice
of her dress to take hold of her breast. His fingers were smooth
and dry, like dead sticks, and he hurt her again and again.
She would not be sick upon Leblanc in his evening
clothes. This was no time for her stomach to decide to be
sincere.
She pressed against the wall at her back and
tried to become nothing. She was darkness. Emptiness. She did not
exist at all. It did not work, of course, but it was a goal to fix
the mind upon.
At last, he stopped. “I will enjoy using
you.”
She did not try to speak. There was no earthly
use in doing so.
He hurt her one final time, pinching her mouth
between thumb and forefinger, breaking the skin of her dry lips and
leaving a taste of blood.
“You have not amused me yet.” He released her
abruptly. She heard the scrape and click as he lifted his lantern
from the table. “But you will.”
The door clanged shut behind him. His footsteps
faded in the corridor, going toward the stairs and upward.
“PIG.” She whispered it to the closed door,
though that was an insult to pigs, who were, in general,
amiable.
She could hear the other prisoners, the English
spies, making small sounds on the other side of the cell, but it
was dark, and they could no longer see her. She scrubbed her mouth
with the back of her hand and swallowed the sick bile in her
throat. It was amazingly filthy being touched by Leblanc. It was
like being crawled upon by slugs. She did not think she would
become even slightly accustomed to it in the days she had
left.
She pulled her dress into decency and let herself
fold onto the dirt floor, feeling miserable. This was the end then.
The choice that had tormented her for so long—what should be done
with the Albion plans that had been entrusted to her—was made. All
her logic and reasoning, all her searchings of the heart, had come
to nothing. Leblanc had won. She would withstand his persuasions
for only a day or two. Then he would wrest the Albion plans from
her memory and commit God knew what greedy betrayals with
them.
Her old mentor Vauban would be disappointed in
her when he heard. He waited in his small stone house in Normandy
for her to send word. He had left the decision to her, what should
be done with the plans, but he had not intended that she give them
to Leblanc. She had failed him. She had failed everyone.
She took a deep breath and let it out slowly. It
was strange to know her remaining breaths were numbered in some
tens of thousands. Forty thousand? Fifty? Perhaps when she was in
unbearable pain later on tonight, she would start counting.
She pulled her shoes off, one and then the other.
She had been in prisons twice before in her life, both times
completely harrowing. At least she had been above ground then, and
she had been able to see. Maman had been with her, that first time.
Now Maman was dead in a stupid accident that should not have killed
a dog. Maman, Maman, how I miss you. There was no one in
this world to help her.
In the darkness, one feels very alone. She had
never become used to this.
The English spy spoke, deep and slow, out of the
dark. “I would stand and greet you politely.” Chain clinked. “But
I’m forced to be rude.”
It was a measure of how lonely she was that the
voice of an enemy English came like a warm handclasp. “There is
much of that in my life lately. Rudeness.”
“It seems you have annoyed Leblanc.” He spoke the
rich French of the South, without the least trace of a foreign
accent.
“You also, it would seem.”
“He doesn’t plan to let any of us leave here
alive.”
“That is most likely.” She rolled off her
stockings, tucked them into her sleeve so she would not lose them,
and slipped the shoes back on. One cannot go barefoot. Even in the
anteroom to hell, one must be practical.
“Shall we prove him wrong, you and I?”
He did not sound resigned to death, which was
admirable in its way, though not very realistic. It was an
altogether English way of seeing things.
In the face of such bravery, she could not sit
upon the floor and wail. French honor demanded a Frenchwoman meet
death as courageously as any English. French honor always seemed to
be demanding things of her. Bravery, of a sort, was a coin she was
used to counterfeiting. Besides, the plan she was weaving might
work. She might overcome Leblanc and escape the chateau and deal
with these Albion plans that were the cause of so much trouble to
her. And assuredly pigs might grow wings and fly around steeples
all over town.
The English was waiting for an answer. She pulled
herself to her feet. “I would be delighted to disappoint Leblanc in
any way. Do you know where we are? I was not able to tell when I
was brought here, but I hope very much this is the chateau in
Garches.”
“A strange thing to hope, but yes, this is
Garches, the house of the Secret Police.”
“Good, then. I know this place.”
“That will prove useful. After we deal with these
chains,” he clinked metallically, “and that locked door. We can
help each other.”
He made many assumptions. “There is always the
possibility.”
“We can be allies.” The spy chose his words
carefully, hoping to charm her so she would be a tool for him. He
slipped velvet upon his voice. Underneath, though, she heard an
uncompromising sternness and great anger. There was nothing she did
not know about such hard, calculating men.
Leblanc took much upon himself to capture British
agents in this way. It was an old custom of both French and British
secret services that they were not bloodthirsty with one another’s
agents. This was one of many rules Leblanc broke nowadays.
She worked her way along the wall, picking at the
rocks, stealing the gravel that had come loose in the cracks and
putting it into her stocking to make her little cosh. It was a
weapon easy to use when one could not see. One of her great
favorites.
There was a whisper of movement. A younger voice,
very weak, spoke. “Somebody’s here.”
Her English spy answered, “Just a girl Leblanc
brought in. Nothing to worry about.”
“. . . more questions?”
“Not yet. It’s late at night. We have hours
before they come for us. Hours.”
“Good. I’ll be ready . . . when the chance
comes.”
“It’ll be soon now, Adrian. We’ll get free.
Wait.”
The mindless optimism of the English. Who could
comprehend it? Had not her own mother told her they were all
mad?
It was a tidy small prison Leblanc kept. So few
loose stones. It took a while before the cosh was heavy enough. She
tied the end of the stocking and tucked it into the pocket hidden
beneath her skirt. Then she continued to explore the walls, finding
nothing at all interesting. There is not so much to discover about
rooms that are used as prisons. This one had been a wine cellar
before the Revolution. It still smelled of old wood and good wine
as well as less wholesome things. Halfway around the cell she came
to where the Englishmen were chained, so she stopped to let her
hands have a look at them as well.
The one who lay upon the ground was young,
younger than she was. Seventeen? Eighteen? He had the body of an
acrobat, one of those slight, tightly constructed people. He had
been wounded. She could smell the gunpowder on his clothes and the
wound going bad. She would wager money there was metal still inside
him. When she ran her fingers across his face, his lips were dry
and cracked, and he was burning hot. High fever.
They had chained him to the wall with an
excellent chain, but a large, old-fashioned padlock. That would
have to be picked if they were to escape. She searched his boots
and the seams of his clothing, just in case Leblanc’s men had
missed some small, useful object. There was nothing at all,
naturally, but one must always check.
“Nice . . .” he murmured when she ran her hands
over him. “Later, sweetheart. Too tired . . .” Not so young a boy
then. He spoke in English. There might be an innocent reason for an
English to be in France, in these days when their countries were
not exactly at war, but somehow she was sure Leblanc spoke truly.
This was a spy. “So tired.” Then he said clearly, “Tell Lazarus I
won’t do that anymore. Never. Tell him.”
“We shall speak of it,” she said softly, “later,”
which was a promise hard to fulfill, since she did not expect to
have so very many laters. Though perhaps a few more than this
boy.
He struggled to sit up. “Queen’s Knight Three. I
have to go. They’re waiting for me to deliver the Red Knight.” He
was speaking what he should not, almost certainly, and he would
injure himself, thrashing about. She pushed him gently back
down.
Strong arms intervened. “Quiet. That’s all done.”
The other man held the boy, muffling his words.
He need not have worried. She was no longer
interested in such secrets. In truth, she would as soon not learn
them.
“Tell the others.”
“I will. Everyone got away safe. Rest now.”
The boy had knocked over the water jug,
struggling. Her hands found it, rolled on its side, empty. It was
perfectly dry inside. The thought of water stabbed sour pinpricks
in her mouth. She was so thirsty.
Nothing is worse than thirst. Not hunger. Not
even pain. Maybe it was as well there was no water to tempt her.
Perhaps she would have become an animal and stolen from these men,
who suffered more than she did. It was better not to know how low
she could have fallen. “When was the last time they gave you
water?”
“Two days ago.”
“You have not much longer to wait, then. Leblanc
will keep me alive for a while, in the hopes I may be useful to
him. And to play with.” In the end, he will kill me. Even when I
give him the Albion plans—every word, every map, every list—he will
still kill me. I know what he did in Bruges. He cannot let me
live.
“His habits are known.”
He was large, the English spy of the deep voice
and iron sternness. She sensed a huge presence even before she
touched him. Her hands brought her more details. The big man had
folded his coat under the boy, accepting another measure of
discomfort to keep his friend off the cold floor. It was a very
British courage, that small act. She felt his fierce, protective
concentration surrounding the boy, as if force of will alone were
enough to hold life in him. It would be a brave man indeed who
dared to die when this man had forbidden it.
She reached tentatively and discovered soft linen
and long, sinewy courses of muscle down his chest and then, where
his shirt lay open at the neck, a disconcerting resilience of
masculine skin. She would have pulled away, but his hand came to
cover hers, pressing it down over his heart. She felt the beat
under her palm, startling and alive. Such power and strength.
He said, “I know what Leblanc does to women. I’m
sorry you’ve fallen into his hands. Believe that.”
“Me, I am also extremely sorry.” This one was
determined to be nice to her, was he not? She took her hand back.
She would free him, if she could, and then they would see exactly
how delightful he was. “These locks,” she jiggled his manacle, “are
very clumsy. One twiddle, and I could get them off. You do not have
a small length of wire about you, do you?”
She could hear the smile in his voice. “What do
you think?”
“I do not expect it to be so simple. Life is not,
in my experience.”
“Mine also. Did Leblanc hurt you?”
“Not so much.”
He touched her throat where she was sore and
bruised. “No woman should fall into Leblanc’s hands. We’ll get out
of here. There’s some way out. We’ll find it.” He gripped her
shoulder, heavy and reassuring.
She should get up and search the cell. But
somehow she found herself just sitting next to him, resting. Her
breath trickled out of her. Some of the fear that had companioned
her for weeks drained away too. How long had it been since anyone
had offered her comfort? How strange to find it here, in this
fearful place, at the hands of an enemy.
After what seemed a long time, she roused
herself. “There is another problem. Your friend cannot walk from
here, even if I get him free of the chain.”
“He’ll make it. Better men than Leblanc have
tried to kill him.” Not everyone would have heard the anguish
beneath the surface of that voice, but she did. They both knew this
Adrian was dying. In a dozen hours, in at most another day, his
wound and thirst and the damp chill of the stones would finish him
off.
The boy spoke up in a thin thread of polished
Gascon French. “It is . . . one small bullet hole. A nothing.” He
was very weak, very gallant. “It’s the . . . infernal boredom . . .
I can’t stand.”
“If we only had a deck of cards,” the big man
said.
“I’ll bring some . . . next time.”
They would have made good Frenchmen, these two.
It was a pity Leblanc would soon take her from this cell. One could
find worse companions for the long journey into the dark. At least
the two of them would be together when they died. She would be
wholly alone.
But it was better not to speculate upon how
Leblanc would break her to his will and kill her, which could only
lead to melancholy. It was time to slide from beneath the touch of
this English spy and be busy again. She could not sit forever,
hoping courage would seep out of his skin and into her.
She stood, and immediately felt cold. It was as
if she had left a warm and accustomed shelter when she left the
man’s side. That was most silly. This was no shelter, and he did
not like her much despite the soft voice he used. What lay between
them was an untrusting vigilance one might have carved slices
of.
Perhaps he knew who she was. Or perhaps he was
one of those earnest men who go about spying in total seriousness.
He would die for his country in a straightforward English fashion
in this musty place and hate her because she was French. To see the
world so simply was undoubtedly an English trait.
So be it. As it happened, she was not an amicable
friend of big English spies. A French trait, doubtless.
She shrugged, which he would not see, and began
working her way around the rest of the cell, inspecting the floor
and every inch of the wall as high as she could reach. “In your
time here, has Henri Bréval visited the cell?”
“He came twice with Leblanc, once alone, asking
questions.”
“He has the key? He himself? That is good
then.”
“You think so?”
“I have some hopes of Henri.” There was not a
rusted nail, not a shard of glass. There was nothing useful
anywhere. She must place her hope in Henri’s stupidity, which was
nearly limitless. “If Fouché is indeed upstairs drinking wine and
playing cards, Leblanc will not leave his side. One does not
neglect the head of the Secret Police to disport oneself with a
woman. But Henri, who takes note of him? He may seize the moment.
He wishes to use me, you understand, and he has had no chance
yet.”
“I see.” They were most noncommittal words.
Was it possible he believed she would welcome
Henri? What dreadful taste he thought she had. “Leblanc does not
let many people know about this room. It is very secret what he
does here.”
“So Henri may come sneaking down alone. You plan
to take him.” He said it calmly, as if it were not remarkable that
she should attack a man like Henri Bréval. She was almost certain
he knew what she was.
“I can’t help you,” the chain that bound him
rattled, “unless you get him close.”
“Henri is not so stupid. Not quite. But I have a
small plan.”
“Then all I can do is wish you well.”
He seemed a man with an excellent grasp of
essentials. He would be useful to her if she could get his chains
off. That she would accomplish once those pigs became like the
proverb and grew wings and went flying.
Exploring the cell further, she stubbed her toe
upon a table, empty of even a spoon. There were also chairs, which
presented more opportunity. She was working at the pegs that held a
chair together when she heard footsteps.
“We have a visitor,” the big English said.
“I hear.” One man descended the steps into the
cellar. Henri. It must be Henri. She set the chair upright, out of
her way, and drew her cosh into her hand and turned toward the
sound of footsteps. A shudder ran along her spine, but it was only
the cold of the room. It was not fear. She could not afford to be
afraid. “It is one man. Alone.”
“Leblanc or Henri, do you think?”
“It is Henri. He walks more heavily. Now you will
shut up quietly and not distract me.” She prayed it was Henri. Not
Leblanc. She had no chance against Leblanc.
The Englishman was perfectly still, but he
charged the air with a hungry, controlled rage. It was as if she
had a wolf chained to that wall behind her. His presence tugged and
tugged at her attention when it was desperately important to keep
her mind on Henri.
Henri. She licked her lips and grimly
concentrated on Henri, an unpleasant subject, but one of great
immediacy. There were twenty steps on the small curved staircase
that led from kitchen to cellar. She counted the last of them,
footstep by footstep. Then he was in the corridor that led to the
cell.
Henri had always thought her reputation inflated.
When he had brought her the long way to Paris to turn her over to
Leblanc, she had played the spineless fool for him, begging humbly
for food and water, stumbling, making him feel powerful. She was so
diminished in her darkness he thought her completely harmless. He
had become contemptuous.
Let him come just a little close, and he would
discover how harmless she was. Most surely he would.
She knew the honey to trap him. She would portray
for him the Silly Young Harlot. It was an old favorite role of
hers. She had acted it a hundred times.
She licked her lips and let them pout, open and
loose. What else? She pulled strands of hair down around her face.
Her dress was already torn at the neckline. She found the spot and
ripped the tear wider. Good. He would see only that bare skin. She
could hold a dozen coshes and he would never notice.
Quickly. Quickly. He was coming closer. She took
another deep breath and let the role close around her like a
familiar garment. She became the Harlot. Yielding, easy to daunt,
out of her depth in this game of intrigue and lies. Henri liked
victims. She would set the most perfect victim before him and hope
he took the bait.
Hid beneath layer upon layer of soft and foolish
Harlot, she waited. Her fist, holding the cosh, never wavered. She
would not allow herself to be afraid. It was another role she had
crafted; the Brave Spy. She had played this one so long it fit like
her skin.
Probably, at the center of her being, under all
the pretense, the real Annique was a quivering mouse. She would not
go prying in there and find out.
THE grilled window in the door glowed ghostly
pale, then brightened as a lantern came closer. Grey could see
again. The details of his cell emerged. Rough blocks of stone, a
table, two chairs. And the girl.
She faced the door, stiff and silent and totally
intent upon the man out in the corridor. Not a move out of her. Not
the twitch of a fingernail. Her eyes, set in deep smudges of
exhaustion, were half-closed and unfocused. She didn’t once glance
in his direction.
He watched her draw a deep breath, never taking
her attention from that small barred window in the door. Her lips
shaped words silently, praying or talking to herself. Maybe
cursing. Again, she combed her fingers through her hair in
staccato, purposeful, elegant flicks that left wild elflocks
hanging across her face.
She was totally feminine in every movement,
indefinably French. With her coloring—black hair, pale skin, eyes
of that dark indigo blue—she had to be pure Celt. She’d be from the
west of France. Brittany, maybe. Annique was a Breton name. She
carried the magic of the Celt in her, used it to weave that
fascination the great courtesans created. Even as he watched, she
licked her lips again and wriggled deliberately, sensually. A man
couldn’t look away.
She’d torn her own dress. The curve of her breast
showed white against the dark fabric—a whore, bringing out her
wares. She was a whore, a liar, and a killer . . . and his life
depended on her. “Good luck,” he whispered.
She didn’t turn. She gave one quick, dismissive
shake of her head. “Be still. You are not part of this.”
That was the final twist of the knife. He was
helpless. He measured out his twenty inches of chain, picturing
just how far a fast kick could reach. But Henri wasn’t going to
wander that close. She’d have to subdue Henri Bréval on her own,
without even a toothpick to fight with.
There were red marks on her skin where Leblanc
had been tormenting her and the tracks of tears on her cheeks. She
couldn’t have looked more harmless. That was another lie, of
course.
He knew this woman. He’d recognized her the
moment Leblanc pushed her stumbling into this cell. Feature by
feature, that face was etched in his memory. He’d seen her the day
he found his men, ambushed, twisted and bloody, dead in a cornfield
near Bruges. If he’d had any doubt, the mention of the Albion plans
would have convinced him. The Albion plans had been used to lure
them to Bruges.
He’d been tracking this spy across Europe for the
last six months. What bloody irony to meet her here.
He’d have his revenge. Leblanc was an artist in
human degradation. Pretty Annique wouldn’t die easily or cleanly or
with any of that beauty intact. His men would be avenged.
If he got out of here . . . No, when he
got out of here, Annique would come with him. He’d take her to
England. He’d find out every damn thing she knew about what
happened at Bruges. He’d get the Albion plans from her. Then he’d
take his own vengeance.
She’d be supremely useful to British
intelligence. Besides, he wouldn’t leave a rabid hyena to
Leblanc.
The peephole went bright as Henri held the
lantern up. His heavy, florid face pressed to the grill. “Leblanc
is furious with you.”
“Please.” The girl wilted visibly, leaning on the
table for support, a sweet, succulent curve of entrapped
femininity. “Oh, please.” The drab blue of her dress and the crude
cut of the garment marked her as a servant and accessible. Somehow
her disheveled hair, falling forward over her face, had become
sensuality itself. “This is all a mistake. A mistake. I swear . .
.”
Henri laced fingers through the bars. “You’ll
talk to him in the end, Annique. You’ll beg to talk. You know what
he’ll do to you.”
There was a sniffle. “Leblanc . . . He does not
believe me. He will hurt me terribly. Tell him I know nothing more.
Please, Henri. Tell him.” Her voice had changed completely. She
sounded younger, subtly less refined, and very frightened. It was a
masterful performance.
“He’ll hurt you no matter what I tell him.” Henri
gloated.
The girl’s face sank into her upturned palm. Her
hair spilled in dark rivers through her fingers. “I cannot bear it.
He will use me . . . like a grunting animal. I am not meant to be
used by peasants.”
Clever. Clever. He saw what she was doing.
Henri’s voice marked him as Parisian, a man of the city streets.
Leblanc, for all his surface polish, was the son of a pig farmer.
And Henri worked for Leblanc.
Henri’s spite snaked out into the cell. “You were
always Vauban’s pet—Vauban and his elite cadre. Vauban and his
important missions. You were too good for the rest of us. But
tonight the so-special Annique that nobody could touch becomes a
blind puppet for Leblanc to play with. If you’d been kind to me
before, maybe I’d help you now.”
“Leblanc has become Fouché’s favorite. With the
head of the Secret Police behind him, he can do anything. You
cannot help me. You would not dare defy him.” She rubbed her eyes
with the back of her hand. “I will do whatever he wishes. I have no
choice.”
“I’ll have you when he’s through with you.”
She went on speaking. She might not have heard
Henri. “He will make me oil my body and do the Gypsy dances I
learned when I was a child. I will dance in the firelight for him
with nothing but a thin bit of silken cloth upon me. Red silk. He .
. . he prefers red. He has told me.”
Grey wrapped the chain around his hand, gripping
tight, seized by the image of a slim body writhing naked,
silhouetted in the golden glow of fire. He wasn’t the only one.
Henri gripped the crossed bars of the grill and pressed his face
close, salivating.
Annique, eyes downcast, swayed as if she were
already undulating in the sensual dance she described. “I will draw
the crimson silk from my body and caress him with it. The silk will
be warm and damp with the heat of the dance. With my heat.” Her
left hand stroked down her body, intimately.
Grey ached from a dozen beatings, thirst was a
torment every second, and he knew exactly what she was doing. He
still went hard as a rock. He was helpless to stop it. God, but she
was good.
Huskily, dreamily, she continued. “He will lie
upon his bed and call me to him. At first, only to touch. Then to
put my mouth upon him, wherever he directs. I have been trained to
be skillful with my mouth. I will have no choice, you see, but to
do as he demands of me.”
Henri clanked and fumbled with the lock. In a
great hurry, was Henri. If the Frenchman was half as aroused by
Annique’s little act as Grey was, it was a wonder he could get the
door open at all.
The door banged back against the stone wall. “You
must not come in here, Henri,” she said softly, not moving, “or
touch me in any way without the permission of Leblanc.”
“Damn Leblanc.” Henri slapped the lantern down
and cornered her against the table. His fist twisted into her skirt
and pulled it up. He grabbed the white shift beneath.
“You should not . . . You must not . . .” She
struggled, pushing futilely at his hands with no more strength than
a tiny, captured bird.
“No.” He threw himself at Henri. And jerked short
on his iron leash. The circle of pain at his wrist brought him back
to reality. He couldn’t get to her. He couldn’t fight Henri for
her. There wasn’t a bloody thing he could do but watch.
“Do not . . .” Her flailing arm hit the lantern.
It tilted and skidded off the table and clattered to the floor and
extinguished. Darkness was instant and absolute.
“Stupid bitch,” Henri snarled. “You . . .”
There was a small squashed thud. Henri yelped in
pain. More thuds—one, two, three. The table scraped sideways.
Something large and soft fell.
No movement. He heard Annique breathing hard, the
smallness of it and the contralto gasps uniquely hers.
Planned. She’d planned it all. He crouched, tense
as stretched cord, and acknowledged how well he’d been fooled.
She’d planned this from start to finish. She’d manipulated both of
them with that damned act of hers.
There was a long silence, broken by intriguing
rustling sounds and Annique grunting from time to time. Her
footsteps, when she walked toward him, were sure and unhesitating.
She came in a straight line across the cell as if it were not dark
as a tomb.
“What did you do to Henri?” The issue, he
thought, had never really been in doubt.
“I hit him upon the head with a sock full of
rocks.” She seemed to think it over while she sat down beside him.
“At least I am almost sure I hit his head once. I hit him many
places. Anyway, he is quiet.”
“Dead?”
“He is breathing. But one can never tell with
head wounds. I may have yet another complicated explanation to make
to God when I show up at his doorstep, which, considering all
things, may be at any moment. I hope I have not killed him, quite,
though he undoubtedly deserves it. I will leave that to someone
else to do, another day. There are many people who would enjoy
killing him. Several dozen I can call to mind at once.”
She baffled him. There was ruthlessness there,
but it was a kind of blithe toughness, clean as a fresh wind. He
didn’t catch a whiff of the evil that killed men in cold blood,
from ambush. He had to keep reminding himself what she was. “You
did more than knock him over the head. What was the rest of it,
afterwards?”
“You desire the whole report?” She sounded
amused. “But you are a spymaster, I think, Englishman. No one else
asks such questions so calmly, as if by right. Very well, I shall
report to you the whole report—that I have tied Henri up and helped
myself to his money. There was an interesting packet of papers in a
pocket he may have thought was secret. You may have them if you
like. Me, I am no longer in the business of collecting secret
papers.”
Her hands patted over him lightly. “I have also
found a so-handy stickpin, and if you will lift your pretty iron
cuff here. Yes. Just so. Now hold still. I am not a fishwife that I
can filet this silly lock while you wriggle about. You will make me
regret that I am being noble and saving your life if you do not
behave sensibly.”
“I am at your disposal.” He offered his chained
wrist. At the same time he reached out and touched her hair, ready
to grab her if she tried to leave without freeing him.
She put herself right in his power—a man twice
her size, twice her strength, and an enemy. She had to know what
her writhing and whispering did to a man. Revenge and anger and
lust churned in his body like molten iron. The wonder was it didn’t
burn through his skin and set this soft hair on fire.
“Ah. We proceed,” she said in the darkness. “This
lock is not so complicated as it pretends to be. We are discussing
matters.”
She edged closer and shifted the manacle to a
different angle, brushing against his thigh. With every accidental
contact, his groin tightened and throbbed. All he could think of
was her soft voice saying, “I will oil my body and dance in the
firelight.” He was no Henri. He wasn’t going to touch her. But how
did he get a picture like that out of his head?
“And . . . it is done.” The lock fell open.
She made it seem easy. It wasn’t. He rubbed his
wrist. “I thank you.”
He stood and stretched to his full height,
welcoming the pain of muscles uncramping. Free. Savage exultation
flooded him. He was free. He bunched and unbunched his fists,
glorying in the surge of power that swept him. He felt like he
could take these stones apart with his bare hands. It was dark as
the pit of hell and they were twenty feet under a stronghold of the
French Secret Police. But the door hung open. He’d get them out of
here—Adrian and this remarkable, treacherous woman—or die trying.
If they didn’t escape, it would be better for all of them to die in
the attempt.
While that woman worked on Adrian’s manacle, he
groped his way across the cell to Henri, who was, as she had said,
breathing. The Frenchman was tied, hand and foot, with his
stockings and gagged with his own cravat. A thorough woman.
Checking the bonds was an academic exercise. There was indeed a
secret pocket in the jacket. He helped himself to the papers, then
tugged Henri’s pants down to his ankles, leaving him half
naked.
“What do you busy yourself with?” She’d heard him
shifting Henri about. “I find myself inquisitive this
evening.”
“I’m giving Henri something to discuss with
Leblanc when they next meet.” It might buy them ten minutes while
Henri explained his plans for the girl. “I may eventually regret
leaving him alive.”
“If we are very lucky, you will have an
eventually in which to do so.” There was a final, small, decisive
click. “That is your Adrian’s lock open. He cannot walk from here,
you know.”
“I’ll carry him. Do you have a plan for getting
out of the chateau with an unconscious man and no weapons and half
the Secret Police of France upstairs?”
“But certainly. We will not discuss it here,
though. Bring your friend and come, please, if you are fond of
living.”
He put an arm under Adrian’s good shoulder and
hauled him upright. The boy couldn’t stand without help, but he
could walk when held up. He was conversing with unseen people in a
variety of languages.
“Don’t die on me now, Hawker,” he said. “Don’t
you dare die on me.”