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"Observe."
"And eavesdrop."
"That, too." And yes, she could blush, a delicate seash.e.l.l glow across her cheeks. "Fortunately, I am discreet."
"And unshockable."
"Quite," she said, after a short pause. She capped the pen and clipped it to a cord around her neck, so that it slid out of sight between her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. She marked her place in the notebook with a ribbon and stowed that, as well, in her reticule. "Your young ward thinks highly of you."
Sebastien could no more blanch than he could blush, and this once he thanked Providence for it. They had been quietferociously quiet, fiercely quietbut Jack had not been able to stifle a gasp against his fist, or the sharp single flex of his hips that had shaken the aluminum frame of the bunk when Sebastien's fangs slipped in.
At that, he was quieter than Sebastien had been in his own time.
"He is very dear to me as well," Sebastien answered. "And your travelling companions? Do you think highly of them?"
Her true smile dazzled. Gone was the contrived, ladylike lift of her mouth at the corners. This was honest mirth, and it included Sebastien rather than mocking him. "I find them a font of human detail," she said. "A veritable education."
"On what do they educate you?"
"On the unpleasant nature of seduction," she said, in a softer tone. She leaned forward, hands braced on the promenade railing, to stare down at the sea below and the Hans Glucker's attendant flock of gulls. The white birds did not seem to care that the s.h.i.+p they followed flew rather than floated. "I would not ever care to find myself on the sort of string upon which Miss Meadows keeps Mr. Allen."
It struck home. Sebastien leaned against the railing beside her, and spoke in French. "Or upon which I keep Jack?"
She tilted her head, watching him from the corner of pale eyes. She didn't s.h.i.+ft away, and when she answered it was in the same language. "I didn't say it."
"Did you need to?"
"Don Sebastien," she said. "Is it you who has the young Mr. Priest on a string? Or perhaps the other way around?"
"Ach." He pushed himself straight against the railing. "Mutual dependency. How unflattering."
"How very like a marriage." She fiddled one pearl earring, refusing to meet his eyes. "No, perhaps you should look to Korvin ur and Mlle. LeClere, if you wish to see a troublesome partners.h.i.+p breeding."
"Are they partners?"
"He makes her cry," Mrs. Smith said, dropping into English again. "And while she seeks refuge and distraction with Lillianwith Miss Meadowsshe does not return Korvin ur's notes unread, either."
"She encourages him."
"She breathes for him, Don Sebastien," Mrs. Smith said. "And Lillian thinks it's funny."
When Sebastien returned to the salon, he watched for it. Conveniently, Allen, Korvin, Mlle. LeClere, and Miss Meadows were still present, playing whist under an electric light. Ladies were partnered against gentlemen, and Mlle. LeClere and Miss Meadows were winningon bra.s.s moreso than chivalry.
Sebastien swirled a cognac in a balloon gla.s.s and lounged in the armchair he'd appropriated, back in the corner beside the door, pretending to read a four-day-old Times of London. He had a knack for vanis.h.i.+ng into the shadows when he cared to, and as long as he didn't snap the paper or rattle his cufflinks the card players in their armchairs seemed to have more or less forgotten him. Except for Oczkar Korvin, who never glanced over at all, as if he were consciously ignoring Sebastien's presence.
The Hungarian was of a yellowish complexion, which could have been natural, but also made it more difficult to tell if he blanched where his hand pressed the cards. But then Mlle. LeClere stood between tricks, laying her hand tidily face-down and fetched drinks for the tablesherry for herself, whisky for Miss Meadows and Mr. Allen, and a plum brandy for Korvin ur. Mademoiselle slipped the gla.s.s into his hand rather than set beside him so she had the excuse to brush her fingers across his palm. And then, Sebastien saw him lift the gla.s.s to his lips, his throat working as he swallowed.
Korvin murmured something in Mlle. LeClere's ear that made her blush. When he turned and saluted Sebastien, the level of the gold-tinged transparent fluid had fallen. Sebastien toasted him back and raised the cognac to his lips, heady fumes searing his nostrils. He tilted the gla.s.s, so the cognac touched his lips, and feigned drinking, watching Korvin's smile, and wondering what, exactly, he was up against.
Observing the dynamics at the table made an interesting pastime. The four played intently, without excess table talk. They were all subdued and p.r.o.ne to starting at small noises, but Sebastien judged that more likely the nervousness of the herd when it cannot place the predator than any effect of guilt.
Allen kept his eyes on Miss Meadows rather than on his partner, as Mrs. Smith had predicted. As a result, he gave away easy tricks, plainly displeasing Korvin. As for Mlle. LeClere, she made an interesting subject. She sat across from Miss Meadows, and kept her gaze almost exclusively on the actress' face in a manner that might have mimicked infatuation if it was not for the narrow line between her brows. The expression made her seem less like love's supplicant, and more like a dog eagerly seeking any clue to its master's mind.
Amidst this, however, she turned the rare fawning glance on Korvin, and seemed only to speak to Allen to apologize to himpeculiar, after her friendliness of the previous evening. Whatever had transpired, however, it wasn't sufficient to keep her away from the table, and there didn't seem to be any enmity between them. Just a sort of chariness like two cats ignoring one another's presence on the bed.
The impa.s.se persisted unaltered until the door slipped open and Hollis Leatherby entered. Sebastien was the only one present who did not startle spectacularly. He had the advantage of having heard and identified Leatherby's step in the corridor, but he feigned a little rustle anyway.
The sound of the paper caught Leatherby's attention. He turned from the ladies and the gentlemen at the card table as if they did not existnot quite a cut direct, but sharp enoughand took a place opposite Sebastien, in the second of three matching chairs. Across the salon, play continued uninterrupted after the first brief flurry of glances. "Don Sebastien," he said.
"Mr. Leatherby," Sebastien answered. He folded the paper in half and set his drink on the side table, centering it carefully on a cork and wicker coaster. "You seem refres.h.i.+ngly unaffected by the general air of nervousness."
"Do I?" Leatherby leaned forward, elbows on the arms of the chair, and hunched between his shoulders. "I wonder, have you seen my wife?"
"Half an hour or so ago. I left her here, but when I returned" Sebastien shrugged. "I have not seen her since."
"d.a.m.n it," Leatherby said, a flash of real temper roughening his voice. "She wasn't on the promenade."
"Perhaps she went to lie down. She seemed rather peaked."
"And what's that supposed to mean?" Leatherby's voice escalated enough that Korvin's head turned, though the other three kept their shoulders set and stared firmly at their cards, a reversal of earlier roles that Sebastien would once have found amusing.
Sebastien held up his hand, mildly, the palm open and facing Leatherby. "It was merely an observation. Really, sir, you are so quick to take offense. One might almost suppose a guilty conscience."
It was provoking, and meant to be. He didn't like Leatherby: didn't like the way he'd dismissed Jack, for one thing, and furthermore didn't like his sharp temper, now that he'd experienced it himself. Careful, Sebastien.
Leatherby drew himself out of the chair, his chest puffed up. "Are you accusing me of something, Don Sebastien?"
"Oh, not at all," Sebastien said. "But I'm also not casting aspersions on the delightful Mrs. Leatherby. So please, there's no need for hackles raised." As he said it, he couldn't remember if it was a common English expression. The languages would run together.
Judging by Leatherby's eyebrow, it wasn't. Ah, well. Quirks of speech were the least of Sebastien's problems. Steadfastly, he refused to stand. "Really," he said. "I imagine she went to lie down. You might look for her there."
Leatherby gave him one more brow-crumpled look and headed for the door. Sebastien heaved a sigh of relief when it closed behind him, and looked up to meet the eyes of Virgil Allen, who was paused beside the caddy, pouring whisky into a still-damp gla.s.s. "My money's on the Chinese. For what it's worth."
"I see." Sebastien reached for his cognac, wis.h.i.+ng he dared to drink it. "Any reason in particular?"
"Just a feeling," Allen answered. "Could be nothing. Probably is," he amended, when Sebastien's arched eyebrow did not waver. "Still, you know those Chinese have got magicians we don't know anything about in the West."
"I've heard that," Sebastien said. "I've also heard a lot about your American hexes and... gris gris, is it?"
"Voudou," Allen supplied. "Mademoiselle LeClere could tell you more about it, I imagine. The Carolinas are civilized; that's her country."
Chapter V.
Jack appeared fifteen minutes later. His color was recovering, though he looked entirely too bright-eyed to have slept the afternoon away. He arrowed straight to Sebastien and plunked down beside him, lifting the cognac gla.s.s from his hand without so much as a greeting. His fingers stroked Sebastien's and Sebastien flinched, but managed not to glance guiltily at Korvin ur.
"It makes you dizzy," Sebastien said.
"Medicinal purposes," Jack said, and sipped the amber liquor. "The sun's under the bow."
"Thank you. I've strolled enough for one day."
"I think you'll stroll more, when I tell you what I learned."
"When you were supposed to be resting."
Jack shrugged. "Ask me who the officer of the watch was last night," he purred, waiting for Sebastien's eyebrows to rise before nodding. "Captain Hoak."
"You're entirely too smug for that to be all."
"The logbook," Jack said, and paused for a sip of cognac, his cheeks hollowing as he rolled it over his tongue. He flirted at Sebastien through lowered lashes, and Sebastien folded his newspaper with a snap that turned Virgil Allen's head. The American cleared his throat and glanced quickly back at his cards. "Shows some inconsistencies. It would appear that the Captain's pen ran dry of ink, and he refilled it, but the blacks do not match. One is a German black, and one is French, and greener. He must have bought ink in Calais."
"What was amended?"
"The time of the three a.m. tour was entered, I would guess, simultaneously with the data for the five a.m. tour. But rest of the entry was written earlier. And the pen was not skipping, which indicates that somewhere between entering the notes and entering the time, the captain did some other writing. Or perhaps changed pens."
The words were low, more shape than breath, for Sebastien's ears alone.
"Jack, you're a marvel," Sebastien said. And then he paused, amused pride replaced by an irrational spike of jealousy, as if he'd bought more of Jack than his freedom, that night in Budapest. And after years of work in making Jack understand that Sebastien didn't own him, and never meant to. "And how did you gain access?"
"Sebastien," Jack said, suddenly serious, his voice still soft, as Sebastien swallowed and sat back, his teeth cutting his gums and the inside of his lips in violentand unwarrantedreaction. "All I did was flirt."
"One might almost say that all you do is flirt," Sebastien said, sourly, but then forced himself to sit back in his chair. "I'm sorry, Jack. That was unkind."
Jack only smiled, his delicate hands cupped around the bell of the gla.s.s. "One scandal draws attention from another," he said, and let one shoulder rise and fall, graceful as a girl. When he gestured with Sebastien's gla.s.s, he led with his wrist, as languidly as Miss Meadows could have managed.
"Terrible boy," Sebastien said, hiding his relief more successfully than he'd hidden his jealousy. And what will you do, Sebastien, you old fool, when he's a grown man and wants more of a life than you can offer him?
Not too much longer now. And Sebastien had no answer.
Sebastien's opportunistic stalking of Mlle. LeClere came to naught, as she left with Korvin urostensibly to change for dinner, but in actuality trotting alongside him with quite pathetic focusafter the card game broke up. Will the girl never be alone? he thought, and settled behind his paper so Miss Meadows and Mr. Allen would not see him seem to rush out after, while Jack made a ceremony of dispensing with the dirtied gla.s.s and adjourning up the stairs. He'd keep an eye on Mlle. LeClere, and if Sebastien could not catch her alone, perhaps she'd be more amenable to Jack's pale beauty.
Mr. Allen packed up his cards and offered Miss Meadows his elbow and they too adjourned a moment later, nodding to Sebastien as they pa.s.sed. As for Sebastien, he set the paper down and leaned his head back against the chair, closing his eyes, to wait out the day. So Korvin was not of the blood. Even that much liquor would have made him terribly sick, if he were. Andas Jack had notedthe sun was under the bow. Sebastien himself would not risk wandering the airs.h.i.+phe checked his pocket watch, stroking the pad of his thumb over the cool, engraved surfacefor at least another fifteen minutes.
He rose from his chair and began to pace. If Korvin were not of the blood, he could be so many other thingsa ghul, a necromancer... a garden-variety rapist and murderer, for that matter. Sebastien did not fool himself that such men limited their predations to beautiful maidens, or even that a rapist's particular intent was l.u.s.t, whatever the erotic fantasies expressed in tawdry paperbacks.
Sebastien, as it happened, knew a thing or two about predators.
And would Mlle. LeClere lie for such a man? As smitten as she was, Sebastien had no doubt at all. In addition, Korvin ur was at least trying to give the impression that he knew something about Sebastien.
Sebastien mused on that for a few moments, straightening pictures that did not need it, and shook his head. There were still pieces missing.
He checked his watch again, though he knew the time, and turned toward the door. He would dress in his evening clothes, and if he could not cut Mlle. LeClere out of the crowd for a word in private, it was time to beg the captain's a.s.sistance in the matter. There were only two days and a few hours more until the Hans Glucker made landfall in New Amsterdam. And if Mme. Pontchartrain had not yet been discoveredin the pa.s.senger quarters or in the airframeSebastien did not believe she would be.
If that made him a cynic, well then, so be it.
As he was reaching for the doorlatch, however, he paused. Someone was on the other side. Someone male, and by his breathing, he was nerving himself to some action.
Sebastien paused and stepped back, waiting with his hands at his sides. The American, Allen, by his scent. And nervous rather than angry, praise G.o.d for small mercies.
If only it were that easy to identify another of the bloodbut contrary to common myth, Sebastien's brothers and sisters in immortality smelled no different dead than they had alive. And his ears weren't quite acute enough to listen for the sound of a human heart. Alas. It would be nice to be more than mundanely supernatural.
Sebastien stood and waited, and at length the door slid open. Virgil Allen started to see him waiting there, hands at his sides, but recovered quickly. "Don Sebastien," he said. "May I enter?"
"This is a public s.p.a.ce," Sebastien said, but made no move to surrender the center of the chamber.
Virgil Allen stepped inside, and shut the door behind himself. He coughed and cleared his throat. "Miss Meadows wishes to make an offer." He extended his right hand, staring resolutely at the floor between Sebastien's boots while blus.h.i.+ng furiously. A folded sheet of cream-colored paper rested between his thumb and forefinger. Sebastien extracted it, broke the still-warm seal, and flipped it open while Allen twisted his boot against the rug.
The letter was brief.
My dear Senor de Ulloa I hope my note does not seem too forward, but it seems to me that I have heard your nameand that of the delightful Mr. Priestbefore. It wasn't until this afternoon that it came to me; of course, we are mutual acquaintances of Mr. Iain MacDonald of Edinburgh, and I believe you and he are members of the same club.
While I myself do not have that honor, I would be very gratified if you would agree to join me for drinks and conversation after dinner tonight. My dear Virgil will be happy to bear your reply.
Yours truly, Miss Lillian Meadows Iain MacDonald was a bookseller. And a bit more than that; he was also, as Miss Meadows suggested, an old friend of Sebastien's and the proprietor of one of the less shady of the underground meeting places. Casually, Sebastien folded the note and slipped it into his breast pocket. "Thank the lady, Mr. Allen, but I will be unable to join her tonight."
"She" Allen hesitated, obviously both relieved by Sebastien's answer and concerned that the news would be unwelcome. "She said, if you were other otherwise occupied, to inquire as to whether you understood her offer."
"I do," Sebastien said. "And I thank her, but no. I cannot oblige."
Mr. Allen nodded and stepped back, clearing Sebastien's path to the door.
"Gracias." Sebastien stepped forward. He paused with his hand on the latch, and said over his shoulder, "Mr. Allen?"
"Sir?"
"You shouldn't permit her to take such advantage of you, Mr. Allen. It's undignified." The American was still gaping after Sebastien as the detective took his leave with a nod, before stepping into the corridor.
Jack was fretting in their stateroom, or rather, the cubbyhole that pa.s.sed for it, but he was dressed for dinner and had Sebastien's evening clothes laid out and brushed. Sebastien paused with the curtain in his hand, and said, "Are you my valet, now?"
"No," Jack replied, turning to the mirror to settle his bow tie, "he's following by steamer with our luggage. Unless you sacked him, too... Oh. You did, didn't you?"
"Sacking, in your colorful idiom, would indicate I found some flaw in his service."
Jack sighed, giving Sebastien his shoulder. "I just thought you'd appreciate it if your clothes were ready. Tomorrow, I'll crumple them in the corner."
"I'm sorry." Sebastien let the curtain fall closed behind him. "I didn't mean it that way." He hesitated, and went to pick up the suit on its hangar. "Did you discover anything about Korvin ur and Mademoiselle LeClere?"
"She's going to have some fast explaining to do on her wedding night," Jack said, in Greek. "It would tell us why she didn't hear anything last night, if she slipped out of the cabin. And what if it was her nightgown that wasn't rumpled? I suppose keeping Madame Pontchartrain silent about something like that would be as good a reason as any to kill her. You don't suppose Mademoiselle LeClere stands to inherit?"
Sebastien harrumphed. "We shall ask the captain for access to Madame's papers, again."
Jack raised a perceptive eyebrow. "What's upsetting you, Sebastien?"