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  Gibson stared up at him. “You can’t seriously mean to do this?”

  “If we’ve any hope of bringing Ross’s murderer to justice, the authorities are going to need his body.” Sebastian sank back into his chair. “I even have some experience in the resurrection trade, remember? I went with Jumpin’ Jack last year.”

  “But you were stealing a body that time. This is going to be a wee bit different.”

  “How much different can it be?”

  Gibson drained his glass again in one long pull. “I don’t suppose you’ve forgotten that you’re getting married in just a few days’ time?”

  Sebastian had forgotten, of course. But all he said was, “As long as we don’t get taken up by the watch, that shouldn’t be a problem.”

  That evening, Charles, Lord Jarvis, returned from a productive session with the Prince, Castlereagh, and Foley to find Hero seated beside the empty drawing room hearth, an open book lying neglected in her lap, her gaze lost in the distance.

  “What’s this?” he asked, pausing in the doorway. “No balls or routs? No boring but improving lecture at some learned society? No intellectually uplifting evening of rational conversation in the salon of a dreadfully unfashionable bluestocking?”

  “No, just a quiet evening at home.”

  He went to take the seat opposite her, his gaze hard on her face. “You’ve been looking tired lately.”

  “Have I?” She gave him an affectionate smile. “What a dreadfully unflattering thing to say.”

  She wore a sprigged muslin gown with puffed sleeves and a simple scoop neckline filled with a fine fichu. But it was the bluestone and silver triskelion pendant around her neck that drew and held his attention. Said to have been worn by the Druid priestesses of Wales, the piece had a long, troubled history that included a mistress of the last Stewart king of England and a bizarre legend to which Jarvis gave no credence whatsoever.

  He had given it to her on a whim, some twelve months before. Once, the necklace had belonged to the errant Countess of Hendon, Viscount Devlin’s mother. But Hero didn’t know that. And it struck Jarvis now, looking at her, that if he were a superstitious man he would find the pendant’s history unsettling.

  He frowned. “Why are you wearing that?”

  She touched her fingertips to the bluestone disk. “I like it,” she said simply. “Why?”

  He shook his head. “Are you still determined to wed Devlin?”

  “Of course. Why do you ask?”

  There were things he could tell her, about Devlin’s birth and about the errant Countess of Hendon; things that even Devlin himself did not know. But Jarvis had learned long ago that knowledge could be power, and he understood his daughter well enough to realize that none of these old, ugly secrets would have the effect of dissuading her if her mind was made up.

  He said, “You almost—almost, mind you—make me wish I’d encouraged your scheme to travel the world.”

  She rose to her feet with a soft laugh, her book clasped in one hand, and kissed his cheek. “Good night, Papa.”

  He watched her walk away, his frown deepening.

  He was feared from one end of the country to the other, his network of spies and the eerie omniscience it gave him legendary. Yet there was something going on here, something that involved his own daughter, and somehow the truth of its nature eluded him.

  Pushing to his feet, he went to yank the bellpull beside the fireplace.

  “Yes, my lord?” said Grisham, appearing in the doorway.

  “As soon as she is free, send Miss Jarvis’s abigail to me.”

  Chapter 29

  Sunday, 26 July

  T he next morning, Sebastian received a note from His Excellency Antonaki Ramadani, the Ambassador to the Court of St. James from the Sublime Port, inviting him for coffee at the Ambassador’s residence that afternoon.

  Sebastian stood for a moment, the elegant cream card in his hand, a thoughtful frown crinkling his forehead. Then he wrote out a short, gracious reply, accepting the Ambassador’s invitation.

  After that, he spent some time at the Mount Street burial ground, studying the lay of the land and the exact location of Alexander Ross’s empty grave. He was heading home again when he heard himself hailed by a breathless, aged voice.

  “Devlin?”

  Turning, he saw William Franklin shuffling up the street toward him, his walking stick tap-tapping on the flagstones of the footpath.

  “Sir,” said Sebastian, going to meet him. “Are you looking for me? There was no need to put yourself to such exertion. If you’d sent round a note I would have been more than happy to come to you.”

  “Poo,” said the aged American Loyalist, pausing to catch his breath. “When a man stops moving he might as well be dead.”

  Sebastian smiled and nodded to the tavern beside them. “May I buy you some refreshment?”

  The old man’s eyes twinkled. “Now, that I will allow.”

  They sat in a nook near the empty hearth, each fortified with a tankard of ale. Franklin took a deep drought, wiped the back of one hand across his mouth, and said, “You asked about Jeremy Bateman, father of Nathan Bateman.”

  “Yes,” said Sebastian, sitting forward.

  “He and his daughter Elizabeth have taken rooms at the Ship and Pilot, on Wapping High Street, in Stepney.” Franklin slid a piece of paper with the name and direction across the table. “I haven’t told them the details of your interest in them. But I must confess I did suggest you might be able to do something to help their son, for they were at first somewhat reluctant to speak to you.”

  “I’m certainly more than willing to try,” said Sebastian. “Although my acquaintance with the First Lord of the Admiralty is slight.” He frowned down at the address. “Seems strange for someone at the Foreign Office like Ross to have become personally involved in an affair of this nature.”

  “I’ve no notion how it came about. Perhaps Bateman can enlighten you.”

  Before he left for Wapping, Sebastian called the various members of his household together in the servants’ hall. The official notice of his forthcoming nuptials was due to appear in the next morning’s papers, and it had occurred to him that it might be a good idea to warn his staff first.

  He waited while they filed into the room, whispering amongst themselves and throwing him curious, furtive looks as they took their seats. He raised his voice. “I won’t keep you long.”

  The room instantly quieted as all eyes trained upon him.

  He said, “I’ve called you together because I have an announcement to make. This household will soon have a mistress: Miss Hero Jarvis has consented to become my wife. We will be wed this Thursday.”

  A moment’s stunned incredulity greeted his words. Then Tom blurted out, “Gov’nor! No!”

  Morey clamped a warning hand on the boy’s shoulder, silencing him, as Calhoun leapt to his feet with a hearty hurrah. “Congratulations, my lord!”

  The others quickly chimed in, although in some instances Sebastian suspected he detected a forced note to their good wishes. A few, no doubt, anticipated more work as Sebastian’s carefree bachelor ways came to an end; others perhaps feared their new mistress might be unduly critical or even demand a change in staff. But only Tom sat with his arms crossed and a black scowl on his face.

  Tom was not fond of Miss Hero Jarvis.

  When the majordomo leaned down to whisper something in the boy’s ear, Tom squirmed from his grasp and fled the room.

  “He’ll come around soon enough,” said Calhoun later, as Giles was putting in the chestnuts.

  Sebastian tossed his driving coat over his shoulders and reached for his gloves. He hesitated a moment. Then he went in search of his tiger.

  He found the boy in the hayloft, a forlorn, prostrate figure with his face buried in the crook of one elbow and bits of straw plastered to his livery. “Go away,” he wailed in a gross breach of etiquette when Sebastian crouched down beside him. But then, their relationship had
always been more than a simple one of lord and servant. Once, the boy had saved Sebastian from the gallows, while Sebastian in turn had given Tom a new life away from the brutal dangers of the streets.

  Sebastian said, “You are aware, of course, that I could by rights have you thrashed for that?”

  A ragged sob shook the boy’s thin frame, and he mumbled something incoherent.

  Sebastian said, “I beg your pardon, but I didn’t quite catch that.”

  Tom twisted sideways, showing him a tear-streaked face. “I said, why are you doing this?”

  Sebastian rubbed the side of his nose with the back of his knuckles. “It’s quite a common thing, you know—for a man to marry.”

  “But why her? She tricked me. And she’s—” Tom broke off. But Sebastian knew what he’d been about to say. She’s Jarvis’s daughter. And, She’s not Kat.

  Sebastian said, “She is quite an accomplished horsewoman, you know. And no mean whip.”

  Tom sniffed, unimpressed. “Everything’s gonna change.”

  “Some things will undoubtedly change, yes. But not everything. I shall still have need of a tiger.” Sebastian paused. “If you’re willing to continue in that position.”

  Tom sniffed again and hung his head. “Oh, yes, sir. I am. Please.” He gulped. “And I am very sorry, my lord.”

  Sebastian pushed to his feet and began to draw on his driving gloves. “I’m off to the East End. Must I take Giles as my groom?”

  “The chestnuts don’t like Giles,” said Tom, dragging his sleeve across his eyes as he scrambled up beside him.

  “Then, come along,” said Sebastian.

  Sebastian could remember his father—or rather, the man he’d thought of at the time as his father—taking him to Wapping as a boy of four or five, to view a famous pirate hanging in chains on the banks of the Thames. It was the custom to hang the pirates at the low-water mark and leave them there until “three tides had overflowed them.” Sebastian had a particularly vivid memory of a crow perched on the dead pirate’s shoulder, its shiny black head jerking up and down as it pecked through the iron netting that enclosed the body.

  He found himself shadowed by that long-ago day as he drove through the crowded streets of Stepney. Like Rotherhithe on the opposite bank, this was an area focused on the river and its maritime trade, the narrow lanes and alleys crammed with ship and boat makers, biscuit bakers and rope makers, mast makers and anchor smiths, its taverns and alehouses overflowing with drunken seamen. Thanks to the long decades of war with the French, the settlement around the Wapping Docks had expanded and expanded again. They didn’t hang pirates here anymore.

  The Ship and Pilot proved to be a modest but respectable establishment. Leaving Tom with the curricle in the inn’s yard, Sebastian tracked Bateman to the Shadwell Spa in Sun Tavern Fields.

  The day was sunny but not excessively hot, the sky arcing above the open fields a pale blue scattered with puffs of high white clouds. The fine weather had brought out a score of the area’s aged, lame, and otherwise afflicted to drink the Shadwell mineral waters, whose sulfurous content was reputed to assist all manner of ills. The American was seated, alone, on a rustic bench in the shade of one of the ancient elms ringing the springs.

  “Mr. Bateman?” said Sebastian, walking up to him and holding out his card. “I’m Devlin.”

  Bateman squinted up against the bright sun, his hair white and sparse, the lines on his face dug deep by the passage of the years and the ravages of a life lived in the sun and weather. He took the card, but he did not glance at it.

  “You’re a viscount?” he said incredulously.

  Sebastian laughed and pulled up a nearby chair. “I am indeed. Don’t I look like one?”

  “I suppose. But ... You’re walking. And alone.”

  “Ah, I see. I left my carriage and retinue at the inn.”

  “Oh.” The man still didn’t sound convinced.

  He looked to be somewhere in his sixties, of medium height with slightly stooped shoulders and a ponderous belly that hung over his sticklike legs. His worn, old-fashioned clothes were those of an honest shopkeeper or tradesman down on his luck. Sebastian suspected that the desperate struggle to save his son from the horrors of the British Navy, topped off with a voyage to London and the extended stay here, had essentially bankrupted him.

  Sebastian said, “Mr. Franklin tells me you’re attempting to secure the release of your son, Nathan.”

  “That’s right.” The old man rubbed one hand over his swollen right knee. “Been in London near two months now, for all the good it’s done us. Seems to me we spend most of our time at this spa, drinking these nasty-tasting waters. My Elizabeth insists on it—says it’s good for my rheumatism.” He nodded over Sebastian’s shoulder. “There she comes now.”

  Pushing to his feet again, Sebastian turned to see a tall, dark-haired young woman walking toward them, a glass of the spa’s famous curative waters in her hands. She wore a simple cambric gown made high at the neck. It was neither stylish nor new, but she wore it with an unconscious grace. Unlike her father, she scrutinized Sebastian’s card with care, then looked at him speculatively.

  “Mr. Franklin tells us you may be able to speak to the Admiralty about Nathan.”

  “I trust he didn’t raise your hopes too high. But I’ll do what I can, yes.”

  She was attractive if not exactly beautiful, with a long nose and widely set brown eyes and a generous mouth. She was not the woman whose silhouette Alexander Ross had framed and hung above his bed. But she might well be the mysterious woman who had visited his rooms the night of his death.

  Sebastian watched her settle on the bench beside her father. “Tell me about your brother.”

  “He was originally taken by the HMS Rodney. But we understand now he’s been transferred to the Swiftshore.”

  “And where is the Swiftshore?”

  “With the British fleet, off Toulon. At first we tried sending his documents to Sir Edmond Pellew, the Commander in Chief of the squadron. They were hand delivered to Pellew, in person. We expected the Navy to release Nathan within days, but nothing happened. Nothing! They know he’s an American. They knew that when they kidnapped him! But it doesn’t matter. Nathan says there’s Swedes and Portuguese on board with him, all impressed, just like him.”

  “You’ve heard from your brother?”

  She nodded. “He’s managed to get several letters through to us.”

  “Who have you spoken to here in London?”

  It was her father who answered. “We’ve been to the Admiralty on any number of occasions. But we’ve only been allowed to speak to low-level functionaries. Our efforts to meet with Viscount Melville have been repeatedly rebuffed.”

  “So what did you do then?”

  “The American Chargé d’Affaires—Mr. Jonathan Russell— got us a meeting with the Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs. A Sir Hyde Foley.”

  Something of Sebastian’s reaction must have shown on his face, because Miss Bateman said, “You know Sir Hyde?”

  “I do. And I suspect my opinion of the gentleman matches your own. What happened?”

  “Condescending twit,” muttered Bateman. He took a sip of his waters and shuddered. “Prattled on and on about how as ‘provincials’ we obviously didn’t understand the workings of the British government, since the Foreign Office had nothing to do with the Admiralty. I said, ‘Well, I may not know anything about that, but I do know something about war, and that’s what you lot are going to have on your hands if you keep kidnapping honest American men.”

  Sebastian hid a smile. “So what did Sir Hyde do then?”

  Bateman’s brows lowered. “Kicked us out, he did.”

  “Is that when you met Mr. Alexander Ross?”

  The old man nodded. “We were coming out of the Foreign Office just as he was going in. Elizabeth here was somewhat distressed by the encounter—”

  “I was in a towering rage,” she added darkly.

  “And Mr
. Ross kindly paused to see if he could offer any assistance.”

  “So you told him about Nathan?”

  “Yes. And he said he knew this bigwig at the Admiralty and offered to write him on our behalf.”

  “When was this?” Sebastian asked. “That you encountered him, I mean.”

  “A couple of weeks ago, I suppose. I can’t say for certain.”

  “Did you ever meet with him again?”

  Miss Bateman nodded. “Yes. He came to see us here—or rather, at the Ship and Pilot—several days later. In order to look at our supporting documents and confirm his understanding of the events before he actually wrote the letter. Unfortunately, I suspect he died before he was able to finish the letter, for he was to send it with our documents, and he never did.”

  “So you never saw him again after that?”

  Father and daughter exchanged guarded glances.

  “Well, did you?” prompted Sebastian.

  “Not exactly.”

  Sebastian shook his head. “What does that mean?”

  She said, “We saw him—last Friday evening, here, in Stepney. But he didn’t speak to us.”

  Sebastian studied her pale, strained face. “Where was this?”

  “Not far from here. Papa had been drinking a glass of the waters, and we were walking back toward the Ship and Pilot. Mr. Ross came out of one of the houses on Market Street, but he turned and walked away very quickly. As I said, I don’t think he saw us.”

  “You’re certain it was him?”

  “Oh, yes,” said Bateman. “It stays light quite late these days. I may be old, but there’s nothing wrong with my eyesight.”

  “Do you remember the house? Would you be able to show it to me?”

  “Gladly,” said Bateman, setting aside his glass and making a move to get up.

  His daughter put out her hand, stopping him. “Not until you’ve finished your waters, Papa.”

  He made a face but dutifully drank it all down.

  They walked together across the field, past a vast rope walk where sweating men were turning cables nearly a foot in girth. The air was thick with the scent of sun-warmed grass and tar and the smells of the river. Just beyond the field they came to a lane bounded on one side by modest but well-kept houses, and Miss Bateman drew up.