Their clutching, brushing fingers were feeble, easily pushed aside, but she did not halt until they were a good distance from both the Chapelease
Chapter Twenty-Five
Beyond Your Ken
“I am no donkey, sir.” Philip Pico bridled, as Alice took his gloves and hat with a sniff.
The other maid, Bridget of the slightly lame left leg and the engaging gapped-tooth smile, took Clare’s, and he held his peace until they had both vanished into the depths of 34½ Brooke Street. “You bear a suspicious resemblance to a stubborn ass. And yet it is
“Keep him in one piece, she said. Welladay, I will, sir.”
“Oh? And what else did she say?”
“Naught that would interest you.”
“Oh, I think it would. Did she mention your predecessor?”
“The one you were in love with, sir? No. She said nothing to me about
Clare halted, and the heat in his cheeks was new and unwelcome. “His name was Ludovico, and I was not
“Good evening, gentlemen.” A rustle of black silk, a breath of smoky sorcery laced with spiced-pear perfume, and Emma Bannon halted on the stairs, eyeing them both with arch amusement. “A drink before dinner?”
“Rid me of this
“Oh?” One eyebrow, elegantly arched. “Philip?”
“About to go slumming with the detective inspector, he was.” The bratling straightened his sleeves much as a gentleman would, and matched Clare glare for glare. “And on such short acquaintance. I thought it best we come home for dinner.”
“It is not
“Inspector Aberline is not welcome at my table, Clare.” Very softly. “Philip, you did well. Go and dress for dinner, if you please. Mr Clare and I have a few matters to settle.”
“Oh, I shall say we do.” Clare straightened as the youth made that same abortive gesture–as if to tug his forelock–and made for the safety of the stairs. He passed Miss Bannon, giving her as wide a berth as possible, and Clare almost did not note that she did not bother to twitch her skirts back as if he suffered something contagious.
As she always had with Ludovico. Did this young annoyance have Valentinelli’s room as well?
Why, Clare asked himself, should he care?
Miss Bannon rested one hand on the banister, the curve of her wrist just delicate enough to make a man think of snapping it.
The idea was a dash of icy water, and Clare inhaled, tensing fruitlessly. He had spent the entire afternoon sifting through papers holding bloodless information about singularly bloody acts, and they had not nettled him one whit. Now, just a few moments in Miss Bannon’s company, and he was boiling.
“Do go on.” She was maddeningly calm, but her fingers were tense. A girl who could snap a word that immobilised a grown man, and yet she appeared so fragile.
Clare had seen this woman perform illogical miracles, and they had left no mark on her youthful face. Was this what the churches of the world, both Popish and Englene, meant when they raved of Woman’s diabolical nature?
He gathered what he could of his dignity. It was a thin cloak indeed. “I am not a pet, nor am I your ward.”
“I agree.” She nodded once, her dark curls swinging. “Were you one, I would cosset you, and were you the other I would not allow you to step forth into the dangers outside for a good long while. You are not well, Clare, and this affair, I am beginning to think, is beyond your ken.”
For a moment he could not quite believe his ears. “I am
“Except you do not consider your loss natural at all, sir, on either account. This is a matter best left to sorcery. I have discovered much today, and it quite disturbs me.”
He could have fastened on