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To Deceive a Duke Page 6
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Thalia hurried after her. ‘Well, then, I won’t go to that party. I have no wish to see that spoiled, arrogant—’
‘Freebooter? Oh, Thalia, we have to go. We told Lady Riverton we would, and you were looking forward to it. Everyone will need your wonderful Antigone to save them from drowning in sugary faux-Shakespeareness. There will be lots of people there, we won’t even notice Averton. Handsome or not.’
‘Perhaps not,’ Thalia said reluctantly. She was silent for a moment, then added, ‘But we will be sure to notice Count Adonis! And he will notice you.’
Clio was careful not to look at her sister, just walking a bit faster on their way home. ‘Don’t be silly. Why would a gorgeous Italian count notice me, when your golden beauty or Miss Darby’s conspicuous giggles will be near?’
‘He kept looking at you just now,’ Thalia said. Not for the first time, Clio cursed Thalia’s powers of observation. ‘If I was a reader of horrid novels, like our friend Lotty, I would call them “speaking glances”.’
‘You are just imagining things. I think all the theatricality is getting to you.’
‘I think not.’ Thalia opened their own garden gate, and went prancing up to the front door, chanting, ‘Clio has a new admirer!’
‘What?’ cried Cory, who came into the foyer just in time to hear this bit of news. ‘Clio has an admirer? Who is it? Oh! Not that silly Peter Elliott? I thought he was in love with you, Thalia.’
‘Far better,’ Thalia said. ‘A dark Italian count! He kept staring at her over Lady Riverton’s tea table. And he is beautiful.’
‘Perhaps Clio will soon be a contessa!’ Cory said, pretending to swoon. ‘And we will all live with her in Italy for ever. In her grand palazzo, with her hundreds of servants and vast marble halls.’
Clio fled their merry laughter, taking the stairs two at a time until she could slam her chamber door behind her and be alone, in silence, at last. Heaven deliver her from sisters!
And from English Viking dukes and ‘dark Italian counts’. They all knew far too many of her secrets already.
Chapter Seven
Edward watched the sun set from his overgrown back garden, seated on the edge of the old fountain, a Turkish cigarillo in hand. The vast sky was a swirling blend of orange and blood-red, streaked with shimmering gold dust, smoky lavender at the edges. Etna dominated the horizon like a silent queen, swathed in silver mists like a torn bridal veil. The breeze that swept up from the valley was cool, carrying away the heat of the afternoon.
It was unlike anything he had ever seen in all his travels—silent, eternal, dramatic. Every instant the sky shifted and changed. The vestiges of modern Sicily, the bustle of the village streets, the vast tides of tourists, receded and there was only the land itself.
It was like Clio. Changeable, mysterious, remote. Beautiful.
Not that she had been so very remote when they had met that morning. He exhaled a grey plume of smoke, remembering the feel of her in his arms, the taste of her mouth. She was intoxicating, worse than the brandy he had given up years ago. Every time he was near her, he wanted more and more of her! He wanted everything.
Her kisses took him out of himself, until there was only her. Only the two of them, floating high above the dark world, lost in a passion that promised everything. But the problem with soaring above the earth, touching the glory of the sun, was that he always fell, Icarus-like, to the rocks below. He had no heart left to offer her.
Edward took another long drag of the cigarillo, drawing the sour smoke deep inside, feeling it burn its way down his throat as he looked down to the marble ledge beside him. Clio’s spectacles lay there, the vivid sunset glowing on the lenses, reflecting the light back to him. ‘Remember why you’re here,’ he muttered. To finish his task. To make sure no one else got hurt. Not to kiss Clio Chase.
He ground the last of the cigarillo out beneath his boot. Maybe one day she might understand. Clio saw things even he could not fathom; so much was hidden in her eyes. Even if she never understood, never saw, he would take care of her. He thought about his first invitation here in Santa Lucia, to Lady Riverton’s ‘theatrical evening’. It was just the first step in his plan.
Edward turned and strode into the palazzo, wrapping the spectacles up in his silk handkerchief. He shoved the makeshift package at one of the footmen, and said, ‘Deliver this to Miss Chase immediately.’
After dinner, when her father, Thalia and Cory were settled to reading in the drawing room, Clio crept down the back staircase to the kitchens. Lady Riverton thought she knew everything that happened in Santa Lucia, but Clio was sure her ladyship saw only the merest surface. Only the polite English side of things. Clio knew that if she wanted the whole truth, she needed to go to Rosa, their cook.
Rosa had a vast family, sons and daughters, nieces and nephews, who worked in every corner of Santa Lucia, the hills and the valleys, both in legitimate venues and those that were less so. Especially her strange younger son, Giacomo, who appeared to have no profession at all, one of the seemingly indolent men in the piazza. If anyone had heard anything of the English duke, it would be Rosa.
The cook was sitting by the kitchen fire, shelling fresh peas and chatting with her husband, Paolo, who ran the stables. A lamb lay on the table, ready to be dressed for tomorrow’s dinner, which meant her butcher son must have been by. Or perhaps the shepherd son.
Clio sat down with them, enjoying the cosy crackle of the flames against the cool evening. Rosa and Paolo just smiled at her, used to her strange ways by now. Paolo held up a bottle of clear liquid.
‘Grappa, signorina?’ he asked.
‘Yes, grazie,’ Clio answered, watching as he poured out a generous glassful and passed it to her. One of their other sons distilled it himself, and it was rough and strong as she sipped at it. She laughed, wiping at her stinging eyes. ‘It’s, er, very good.’
Rosa laughed. ‘Oh, Signorina Clio! You are an odd one.’
‘Yes, I know. I’ve often been told that.’ If they only knew just how odd. But no one knew, really. No one but Averton. And he was an odd one himself. ‘Rosa, what do you know about the farmhouse site being cursed?’
Rosa made a quick gesture to deflect evil before going on with her pea-shelling, not looking at Clio. ‘Cursed?’
‘Yes. I heard something about it today, and I was surprised you hadn’t warned me.’
‘Pah! You are Inglese, it can’t hurt you.’
Clio took another drink of the grappa. It was really quite nice once she got used to it. So, she took yet another. ‘A strange curse, to respect national boundaries like that.’
‘What Rosa means,’ Paolo said, ‘is that you have to believe in a curse for it to work.’
‘How do you know I don’t?’
Rosa gave a sharp laugh. ‘You’re still here, aren’t you, signorina?’
‘Are you saying there are some who are not still here? Victims of this curse?’
Paolo shrugged. ‘That house was destroyed in a time of great violence. Bloodshed, battles, much fear. The last family who lived there, a Greek family, fled as the Romans drew near. But they were acolytes of Demeter, they called on their goddess to avenge them for the loss of their home as they left. Since that long-ago day, anyone who tries to live there, grow crops there, they fail. They die horrible deaths.’
‘They see the ghosts,’ Rosa added. ‘It drives them mad.’
‘Hmm,’ Clio said thoughtfully. ‘Maybe the ghosts leave me alone because I don’t try to live there. Because my work is meant to help those people who fled, to tell their story.’
‘Perhaps,’ Rosa said. ‘But if anyone comes there with evil intentions…’
Like Averton? Were his intentions ‘evil’? ‘What have you heard about the Englishman who has taken the Picini palazzo?’
Rosa and Paolo exchanged a long glance. ‘Not a great deal yet,’ Rosa said. ‘Our youngest son got a place as footman there. He says this man is very great in your country. A prince of some so
rt.’
Clio laughed to envision Averton with a crown perched crookedly on his golden head. That grappa was certainly doing its work! She felt all warm and content. Even curses and dukes couldn’t affect her, not now. ‘Not a prince exactly. But very important, yes. I’m surprised to see him here.’
‘You knew him before, signorina?’
‘Yes, in England.’
‘Ah. Our son says this prince seems to have come here for the antiquities, as so many do. He has many objects he moved into the palazzo. He keeps them in his very bedchamber!’
‘Really?’ Clio leaned forward, her interest sharpening. ‘What sort of objects?’
‘Vases, statues.’
‘A statue of Artemis, perhaps? About as tall as me? Alabaster?’
‘I don’t know,’ Rosa said. ‘I will ask Lorenzo. Is this statue important?’
‘It could be.’ Clio sat back, sipping the last of her grappa. ‘If you hear anything else interesting from Lorenzo, will you tell me? I’d like to know what he’s doing here.’
‘Of course, signorina. Is he a bad man, this prince of yours?’
Clio considered this, thought about their kiss, his touch. The madness that came over her every time she saw him. ‘I don’t know yet.’
She thanked Rosa and Paolo for the drink and the information, and left them to their own gossip. At the top of the stairs, she could hear the low murmur of voices from the drawing room, the sound of Thalia playing old English madrigals at the pianoforte. She should rejoin them, but her head was spinning with the grappa, curses, ghosts and thoroughly baffling princes. Instead, she turned toward the second flight of stairs leading to the bedchambers.
Her own room was silent and dark. No one had come yet to light the candles or turn back the bed. Clio walked unsteadily to the window, opening it to lean out and take a deep breath. The vast sky was indigo blue, with only one tiny star and a crescent of moon to light the inky expanse. It was still early; soon, the pearly stars would blink on one by one. Distant Etna was just a blur without her spectacles.
It would be a good night for the Lily Thief, Clio thought idly. Dark enough to avoid detection. But Santa Lucia was quiet, with nothing to distract people from their purloined ancient treasures. Maybe later, when everyone was cosy in bed…
She perched on the wide windowsill, tucking the Turkey-red muslin skirts of her evening gown around her. Those thieving days were behind her now, which was a pity considering the Alabaster Goddess might be so near. Clio peered out over the roofs, past the bulk of the cathedral, to the edge of the Duke’s palazzo. It, too, was a bit blurry, but some of the windows were lit up, glowing bright squares. Someone was home.
What was he doing in there right now? she wondered. Did he gloat over his treasures? Plan how best to drive her even more insane? Did he consider whatever it was that had brought him to Santa Lucia in the first place?
Rosa said it was the hunt for antiquities, like almost everyone else here. But Clio had learned the hard way that Averton never did things as ‘everyone else’ did, and never for the expected reasons. He was a world unto himself, completely indecipherable.
Clio doubted his appearance here in sleepy Santa Lucia, so far from his ducal empire, could be a mere coincidence. So, what was it?
‘I will just have to find out,’ she murmured. She had gained many skills in her Lily Thief days. Maybe it was time to put them to use again. And, with Marco in town, she had a potential accomplice.
If he wasn’t up to mischief himself. Marco was always up to mischief. The question was, what sort was it? What was happening behind the sleepy façades of Santa Lucia?
A knock sounded at her chamber door, and Clio stood up, shaking out her skirts. ‘Yes?’
‘A delivery for you, Miss Chase,’ a maid said.
‘Come in.’ It was a strange package, a lump of white silk tied with a bit of string. Clio quickly unrolled it, catching her spectacles in her hand. There was no note, no message. Just the scarlet letters embroidered on a corner of the silk.
ER.
‘Edward Radcliffe,’ she whispered.
It seemed so strange that he even possessed a given name.
‘Edward,’ she whispered again, crumpling the handkerchief in her palm. ‘I promise I will find out what you’re doing. You can’t escape from me. Prince or not.’
It was definitely not one of the finer streets of Santa Lucia.
Edward nudged aside a pile of rubbish with the toe of his boot. The cobblestones were old and cracked, streaked with refuse; the lane itself was narrow and dark, close-packed with ancient buildings that faced the world with barred doors and broken, shuttered windows, with walls of peeling, grimy stucco. From behind those walls he could hear the shriek of drunken laughter, the crash of quarrels, the two barely distinguishable from each other. The smell of rotting vegetables, sour grappa and old chamber pots hung heavy in the still night air. It was after midnight, but he knew it would be little different at midday.
This street was far from the Picini palazzo, or even from the smaller, respectable abodes of shopkeepers and servants. This was another world entirely, one kept far from the tourists, the wealthy. Yet this was the only place where he could find what he sought.
There were surely answers behind those barred doors, answers that would never be easily given up. So, he would have to take them.
He paused, his black clothes and dark cap blending with the shadows as he studied the dwelling opposite. It appeared to be deserted, a dilapidated structure, yet it had to be the one he sought. He settled in to wait, his arms crossed over his chest. In his work, cool, predatory patience was a necessity, and he had learned it at long last after all his wildly impulsive years.
Like the impulse that led him to kiss Clio Chase at her farmhouse—despite what had happened in London.
He reached up to rub at the scar on his brow, that rough reminder of where ‘impulse’ had got him. He had a task here, one that included keeping Clio far away from it all. Far from places like this, and from him.
He was not doing a very good job of it so far. Kissing her; agreeing to meet her father. But that would change.
Right now, it seemed. A small, flickering light appeared in one of the broken upper windows. Someone was home.
Edward crept across the lane, drawing a dagger from its sheath beneath his sleeve. Holding it balanced on his leather-gloved palm, he made his way around the house to its back door. It faced on to an alleyway even narrower than the front street, barely wide enough for one man to walk down. More refuse was piled in the doorway, but, as he had suspected, it was not barred. The tip of his knife made quick work of the flimsy lock.
The corridor inside was dark and dank, smelling of dusty disuse. Surely no one lived here but the mice; it was perfect for nefarious plots. Everyone in Santa Lucia surely knew what went on here, but no one would ever speak of it. Tomb-raiding was the pastime of centuries here, the key to ill-gotten prosperity.
But that was also about to change.
Moving silently on the balls of his booted feet, Edward made his way up a narrow staircase. He did not stop at the lighted room, but kept going ever upwards until he found a narrow space under the eaves, just as his informant had said. There was a gap in the floorboards there, where he could hear and see everything that went on in that room below. But they could not see him, and would thus blithely go on with their plans.
Oh, yes. Things were about to change indeed.
Chapter Eight
The next day Clio did not go to her farmhouse, but to the villa with her father and sisters. She was tired from the sleepless night, the grappa, and was not sure if she should be alone in the secluded meadow until she knew more about the enemy’s plans. She might have been a thief, but never an impulsive one. It didn’t pay to act rashly, if a person wanted to achieve their goals and come out of the fray unscathed.
She had made the mistake of jumping in without the proper preparation in Yorkshire. She would not do that again.
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She sat at the edge of the partially uncovered banquet hall of the villa, sketching the elaborate mosaic floor, carefully noting measurements. The people who once lived here were rather different from her prosperous but hard-working farmers. These had been the rulers of this distant outpost, this luxurious little colony built up from nothing to be the bread-basket of a kingdom. And their villa reflected that status, full of sumptuous touches like a thermal bath and elaborate courtyard gardens.
Here, in the banquet hall, the borders of the floor were inlaid with grapes, figs and pomegranates, common Greek fertility symbols, the purple and red colours still lush and glistening after all these years. They framed scenes of parties such as the ones that must have gone on long into the night here. Diners clad in purple, blue and white robes, lounging on low couches as they gorged themselves on delicacies such as fishcakes, white breads, honeyed sweets and copious vats of wine.
Clio smiled as she drew their laughing, satisfied faces, imagining their drunken conversations. The gossip about the sexual orgies of powerful officials, the talents of actors seen recently at the amphitheatre, favourite poets, onerous new taxes. The peccadilloes of their neighbors. Surely not much had changed over the centuries. Very similar talk could be heard at Lady Riverton’s house, too.
Except for the orgies, of course. No one would even say such a word in the presence of an unmarried English lady! Clio laughed aloud. If only they knew how she had augmented her already surprisingly frank classical education with information from Rosa and the other Sicilians. If she had to, she now knew the best ways to breed strong goats. The best sexual positions for a human woman, too, if she wanted to conceive a boy child. The best herbal potions to use if she didn’t want to conceive a child at all. That would surely some day be useful.
‘Shocking,’ she murmured. Yes, if they all knew, Lady Riverton, the Darbys and Elliotts, the Manning-Smythes, she would be cast out of ‘good’ society.
Would that be a terrible thing? Not for herself, maybe, but for her father and sisters. They were what kept her tethered to reality.