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Authors: Samantha Saxon

Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Military, #Regency, #Historical Romance

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Chapter Thirteen

 

Daniel watched Nicole Beauvoire from the corner of his eye as they strolled along the Rue Saint Honore, trying to decide if the woman was mad, or merely a patriot.

Her impassioned speech pertaining to the assassinations had certainly sounded reasonable, sane. She was protecting the innocent, defending her country against the tyranny of the corrupt. Yet, as he tried to envision executing a man in cold blood, without provocation… No image came.

But that was the point of contention, was it not… provocation.

She was a woman and perhaps her understanding of provocation was entirely different from his own. Nicole Beauvoire believed that she was protecting the innocents of this war, believed that she was justified in performing the assassinations.

He was undecided as to whether her position was defensible, the philosophical question being murky at best.

If a man was in the process of murdering a woman, Daniel would not only be justified in stopping the man with any force needed, but condemned if he walked passed the commission of that crime. Yet, if that same man were simply intending to murder the woman, would he then be justified in preempting the violent act by any means necessary?

And the more pertinent question that had been bothering him, eating away at his conscience all night--Was he then culpable for the assassination of Joseph LeCoeur if he did nothing to stop it from taking place?

Again, he could not say.

“Here we are.”

Daniel was pulled from his deliberation and into the agreeable surroundings of the unusual shop they had just entered. To his surprise, the shop was not that of a modiste, or a milliner, but that a shop which sold toys.

Colorful silk butterflies hung from the ceiling and Daniel smiled as a tow-headed boy barreled out the door, aiming a wooden pistol that popped a cork when the child pulled the trigger. Tiny toy soldiers lined the shelves of one wall with exquisitely detailed rocking horses sitting beneath them.

Strolling over, Daniel fingered the black mane of one of the horses, confirming that it was indeed made from coarse horse hair. He looked up, staring at the back of the woman who had brought him here as she bent forward to speak in whispered tones with the elderly owner of the colorful shop.

Curious as to what an assassin could possibly want in a toy shop, Daniel circled a display of dolls and slowly made his way toward the counter so that he might hear their conversation.

“Three years, if I remember?” the proprietor of the shop was asking.

The petite woman nodded and the shop keeper disappeared behind a curtain only to return a moment later. The merchant smiled, holding up a brightly painted wooden top.

“If you will note, Mademoiselle, the circular pattern adds interest for the child when the top is spun.” The older man twisted his fingers, sending the top spinning on the surface of the counter. “Viola.”

Nicole Beauvoire stood on her tip toes so that she might peer down directly over the rotating toy.

“Oh,” she laughed, taking Daniel by surprise. The sound was so light, so genuine, so divested of the dark deeds which she now contemplated that he found himself walking to the counter to have a look. “That’s wonderful.”

She was still grinning when Daniel approached and the sight caused him to miscalculate the distance and he bumped the counter with the tip of his atrocious shoe. The top began to wobble and she scooped it up and stared at him, her violet eyes lit with pleasure.

“Observe what happens to the blue and red lines when the top begins to rotate,” she said, excited to share her new discovery.

Crossing his forearms on the polished counter, Daniel hunched over prepared to be amazed. But at the moment it was her smile, the contrast between white teeth and raspberry red lips that tempted him to lick the juice from every recess of her luscious little mouth.

“Uh, spin away,” Daniel said, a bit strained.

She mimicked the shop keeper’s quick movements, but it took several attempts before she could set the top to spinning.

“Look,” the lady said delighted, forcing him to quail his basal instincts.

He dutifully bent his head and smiled genuinely as the colorful swirls appeared to expand then contract to the outer edges of the top, only to do it all over again.

“Brilliant,” he chuckled, joined by the shop keeper and the beautiful woman to his left.

Still smiling, Daniel glanced up but as he bent his head to view the top once more he noticed that the striking woman had also placed her forearms on the oak counter. This had the delicious effect of pushing her rather large breasts to the point of bursting from her bodice. And while he preferred a woman’s rounded backside to her rounded bosom, no man could help but admire the lady’s all too feminine curves.

Including, he realized, the elderly shop keeper.

With a menacing glare at the lecherous old man, Daniel snatched up the top, causing Mademoiselle Beauvoire to scowl as she uncoiled from her provocative position.

“I’ll take it, Monsieur Gaulet, and if you would please be so kind as to wrap the top with this.” She passed the shopkeeper a sealed correspondence, her canary yellow reticule dangling from her delicate wrist. “I would be most appreciative.”

“Of course, Mademoiselle Beauvoire. I assume you would like this gift sent to Honfluer?”


Oui
.”

The man bowed and then went off to wrap the top, leaving Daniel to wonder as to whom would be the recipient of the interesting toy but more importantly… the letter.

“Mademoiselle Beauvoire?” Daniel raised his brows. “You must come here often.”

He watched her stiffened slightly and confirmed with a nod. “Oui, quite often.”

The woman turned away and examined the toy soldiers with such scrutiny that Daniel was sure her lovely violet eyes would cross. She obviously had no intention of revealing the information he had been fishing for, so he reached into his pocket and pulled out his money.

“How much is the cost?” he asked as the shop keeper emerged from the back.

The man glanced at Nicole Beauvoire who took the small package and smiled graciously, saying, “Just add the purchase to my account, Monsieur Gaulet. Au revoir.”

Stepping onto the street, the alluring spy yanked at her gloves and turned on him in anger.

“We!” she snarled through a charming smile. “Unless, you intend all of Paris to think you my protector, I would prefer you not toss money about as if we were somehow aligned.”

“My apologies, I suppose it was merely a matter of habit.”

The lady swept a speculative gaze over the length of him and apparently found him wanting. “I suppose paying for a woman would be habitual with you. However, it is difficult enough working with you tagging along at my heels. I could do without your attracting unnecessary attention.”

Mademoiselle Beauvoire turned her head to the right, her black hair glistening in the morning sun. Her eyes fixed in the distance and he could see from her pristine profile that she was thinking.

“As a matter of fact,” she pulled the strings of her reticule and removed a small piece of paper. “Go to this address and collect the items on the list. I shall meet you back at the apartment later this evening.”

Daniel shook his head and with a crooked grin, said, “No chance I’m leavin’ your side, lass.”

Sighing, the woman looked up and spoke to him as if he were an idiot. “Monsieur Damont, I am going to the apothecary where I plan to discuss, in great detail, remedies for feminine ailments. And while I am sure the topic would prove most fascinating for you, the fact remains that you know my objective, leaving me very little choice but to return to the apartment or risk your exposing this sanction to every citizen of Paris!”

Unaccustomed to being spoken to in such a manner by anyone, much less a woman, Daniel swallowed his pride and nodded, looking down at the elegant scrawl.

“Oh, you can’t be serious,” he groaned, reading the list.

“Deadly,” she sang, her lips curving to betray her amusement.

A thought struck and Daniel straightened, saying with his most charming of smiles, “As you wish, Mademoiselle Beauvoire. I shall happily retrieve the items on your list and await you at the apartment.” Her brows drew together with suspicion but when he lifted her hands to his lips and kissed, whispering, “Au revoir.” She out and out scowled.

Daniel turned and walked down the wide boulevard, feeling her eyes on his back every step of the way. He slowed his pace enjoying every moment of her discomfiture, knowing that she was wondering, speculating as to his new found amicability.

But the lady had no notion of how amiable he intended to get. 

He had come to Paris to forget, to be distracted from his hurt, but his pain had followed him and all he wanted to do now was go home to Scotland, to drink himself into a peaceful stupor and forget about the ethical quagmire in which he was now sinking.

Assist in Joseph LeCoeur’s execution or abandon the woman that intended to kill him?

Both alternatives were grim, but he knew himself to well. Minister LeCoeur damn well deserved the wrath of the British government but he could not leave Nicole Beauvoire to perform the task alone, knowing she was in danger. He had considered it, prodded by her humiliating barbs and supported by the knowledge that she was indeed choosing to remain in Paris.

The question remained as to why?

What had happened to this lovely woman to turn her heart so cold, to make her capable of such a thing? Was she equally deserving of her punishment should she be captured by the French? Daniel was not sure that he wanted to know.

He was much more inclined to avoid the situation altogether. Seduce the woman; lure her to Honfleur before he had the killing of Joseph LeCoeur forever on his conscience and a black mark against his soul.

Chapter Fourteen

 

London, England

October 21, 1811

 

Lady Juliet Pervill walked toward the Duchess of Glenbroke’s town home on Governor’s square bemoaning the fact that they were indeed walking.

“Why in heaven’s name did we stroll today?”

Her cousin, Lady Felicity Appleton, closed her fawn colored eyes and lifted her perfectly sculpted face toward the sun.

“Mmm. How can we not walk on such a glorious day?” Her lids fluttered open and she searched the blue expanse. “There’s not a single cloud in the sky.”

Truth be told, Juliet was pleased to see her cousin take such pleasure in their afternoon outing. It was the first time since the murder of her dear friend, Lord Elkin that Felicity had truly enjoyed herself.

But at present her cheerfulness was damned annoying.

“Yes, yes, beautiful, beautiful.” Juliet winced. “Nevertheless, these new boots are making mincemeat of my feet.”

Felicity stopped and she sighed, thankful to her considerate cousin for giving her a moment to rest.

“We can’t dally too long, dearest. Sarah was quite aDamont that we arrive punctually.”

This time.

Felicity had not said the words but she knew her cousin was thinking them. Juliet blushed, remembering the kisses she had exchanged with Robert Barksdale that had led her to utterly forget the hour the last time she was invited to tea by the Duchess of Glenbroke.

Juliet resumed walking, relegating the delicious Lord Barksdale to the back of her mind. “Yes, Sarah was quite insistent in her invitation. I gathered that she wanted to speak with us about a matter in particular.”

“Yes, I felt similarly when I spoke with her at Hyde Park.” Juliet stared at the enormous façade of the Duchess of Glenbroke’s home, trying to decide what might be going on in Sarah’s pretty little head. “Do you think she is increasing?”

“Oh,” Felicity gasped as she always did when discussing babies. “Wouldn’t that be delightful?”

Juliet gave a mental shrug, not particularly liking infants. Children she adored, but the moment she took a babe in her arms the child never failed to spit up their breakfast all over her favorite gown.

“Yes,” she muttered, but her eyes narrowed as a man came out of Sarah’s front door. “That would be lovely.”

Juliet watched, eliminating their acquaintances as the man walked toward them; too broad to be Aidan Duhearst, too dark to be either Daniel McCurren or Christian St. John. She focused all of her attention on the man’s face while trying to appear as though she were not.

She could see his features now. High cheek bones, full lips for a man, a square jaw that was echoed by closely trimmed sideburns. He was ten paces away and her forehead creased as she out and out stared, trying desperately to understand why the man seemed so familiar.

The gentleman tipped his hat as he passed them and Juliet all but gasped when she met his gaze. His severe eyes burrowed into her as though he understood every thought that she ever had or ever would have.

Her head snapped round as they continued walking and she stared at his back and then his backside in open, appreciative assessment. He must have felt her carnal evaluation because he too looked back, meeting her eye just before his dark brows furrowed in what appeared to be confusion. Thinking he too felt some familiarity, she was enlightened as to his bewilderment the moment she walked headlong into a lamppost.

“Oh, dear, Juliet! Are you alright?” Felicity fussed.

Mortified, Juliet rubbed her forehead and glanced at the man from beneath her hand, praying that he had not noticed her inelegance. But he had, and she knew it with the slight quirking of his lips as the handsome gentleman turned around and continued on his way.

“I’m fine,” she said, irritably. “But who was that man? He seemed so familiar.”

Felicity shrugged her lovely shoulders. “I’ve never seen him before.”

“He came out of Sarah’s house.”

“Really?”

Juliet rolled her eyes amazed at Felicity’s lack of observation. “We shall inquire with Sarah? Come on,” she prodded, her aching feet completely forgotten.

***

Lord Seamus McCurren had just stopped laughing at the silly chit whom had so flatteringly crashed into the lamppost while giving him a second, infinitely more thorough look, when his mind returned to the task at hand.

He continued down the road with disquiet echoing each step that took him that much closer to his parent’s town home.

Oh, his commission was simple enough. Inform his parent’s that his brother had been found, that Daniel’s never ending state of drunkenness had, no doubt, been instrumental in his offering his service to the crown… in Paris.

“Bugger me,” he muttered, already picturing his father’s reaction, his wrath and he could throttle Daniel for making him be the one to feel it.

Seamus had gone to his brother’s town home to confront Daniel about his drinking, but rather than finding his impulsive brother, he had found only a white calling card. The gentleman on the card had been surprisingly difficult to trace. Their issuing conversation combined with the additional information just provided by the Duke of Glenbroke would be enough to convey to his parents the events of Daniel’s departure with some semblance of accuracy. 

That would not, however, explain why.

His parents would demand to know why the heir apparent to the Earldom of DunDonell would do something so stupid, so careless as to run off to war.

But he himself was not sure, or rather, unsure if he wished to divulge his suspicions.

Daniel had been shocked, as everyone had, by Sarah Duhearst’s sudden marriage to the Duke of Glenbroke. But Seamus was beginning to believe that Daniel’s shock had been more in the line of desolation.

His brother’s decline had begun shortly after Lady Duhearst’s unexpected nuptials and as they had been lifelong friends without even the hint of interest on Daniel’s part, no one had connected the two events.

But Seamus knew his brother, knew that the things closest to his boisterous brother’s heart were held that much tighter to Daniel’s chest. Seamus knew that what Daniel needed to get over the girl was to face Sarah herself, to see the content duchess in her home with Glenbroke at her side. But he could not do that while in Paris, which is, no doubt, why he had volunteered for this little excursion. 

“Bloody idiot,” Seamus muttered, not looking forward to witnessing his mother’s fear.

He took a deep breath then blew out his tension with on quick puff as he banged twice against the black lacquered door.

The door to the Earl of DunDonell’s townhouse was opened by his parent’s diminutive butler and Seamus stepped inside. “Afternoon Hopkins. Are my parent’s available?”

“The earl and countess are taking tea in the small drawing room, my lord.”

Damn.

“Thank you, Hopkins. I’ll announce myself."

“Very good, my lord.”

Seamus walked silently to the small drawing room, all the while reviewing his stratagem for dealing with his parents. He knocked on the door and heard his father’s deep voice.

“Come.”

Seamus walked into the room and glanced from his father to his mother. The countess placed her embroidery on the small mahogany table in front of her and smiled brilliantly, saying, “Seamus!” with such enthusiasm that he felt a right bastard for not having visited more often.

“Mother,” Seamus said, kissing her on the cheek and trying to avoid his father’s disapproving stare as the earl folded his newspaper and placed it on his lap.

“Father.” Seamus bowed, his mother’s hand still on his shoulder as they turned to look at the enormous man as he rose from his chair.

“Father, is it?” The earl’s bushy brown brows arched and Seamus felt his spine go rigid. “Tara, is this one of our offspring? Fer I do not recognize the lad?”

“Malcolm, do stop teasin’ him.” His mother indicated a chair, her strawberry blonde hair and pale blue eyes shining as she offered, “Have a seat, Seamus, dear.”

Seamus met his father’s amber eyes and knew that the man was far from jesting.

“Yes,” his father resumed his seat. “Tell us what you have been up to fer the past nine months.”

Seamus gave a polite smile, not about to tell his father that he had been living with his mistress, that he had been happily researching ancient manuscripts in the quieter corners of the west end. He hated the obligations of polite society and as the second son had been allowed to pursue his interests unencumbered by the responsibilities of position.

But if something were to happen to Daniel, he would have to endure the responsibilities… and the pain.

“I’ve discovered Daniel’s location.” His parent’s stared at him expectantly, far too practical to waste words on questions they knew would be answered. “He’s in Paris.”

His mother sat back, her subtle intake of breath more devastating a reaction than another lady’s fainting dead away.

“He has volunteered for a mission that I am assured will take no more than two weeks.”

“Mission?” His father spoke for both his parents.

“Daniel is merely delivering a message and will return on the next available ship.”

“Bloody hell!” his father roared as he shot out of his seat. “Has the lad no sense? ‘Tis not enough that he gallivants around town two sheets to the wind. No,” his father’s bulky arm thrust forward. “That is not entertainin’ enough for the boy.”

“Calm down, Malcolm.”

“Now,” his father bellowed with a snort. “The lad, my heir,” he thumbed his burly chest twice with the palm of his large hand. “Runs off to Paris where he might very well get himself killed!”

His mother raised a handkerchief to cover her mouth and then walked toward the fireplace. His father looked in her direction and blinked away his remorse for upsetting her as he said in a more subdued tone, “You’ve let your brother run wild, Seamus.”

“This is not his fault, Malcolm.”

“Aye, it is, in part.” His father nodded then pointed his thick finger at him. “You’ve been in London for so long, Seamus that you’ve no notion what yer brothers are about.” Seamus lifted his chin, straining against the weight of his guilt. “And you damn sure were in town when Daniel started to imbibe.”

“God, yer an ass at times, Malcom!” His mother’s pretty forehead pulled together in an all too familiar and totally uncontrollable anger. “Daniel has always done what he damn well pleased, and I’ll not have you blamin’ the other lads for it.”

But Seamus did not need his father’s censure, he already blamed himself.

Daniel had never been one to drink in excess and the moment Seamus heard the rumors of his brother’s drunken escapades, he should have been there to ascertain their cause.

But he hadn’t been there for Daniel and realized that he had not been there for his family for quite some time. He was the black sheep of his enormous family, totally opposite from his brothers in appearance and demeanor.

“He’ll be home in two weeks' time, mother.”

And if he was not… Seamus would be forced to go and get him.

BOOK: England's Assassin
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