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Six Impossible Things(by pricelezz prince)

Six Impossible Things(by pricelezz prince)

By pŕıćéĺèżż in 4 May 2017 | 20:20
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Prologue




“Girls cannot join the Foreign Office.”
“No, Roselie, girls are never spies.”
“Grow up to be a diplomat? I fear, child, that is
impossible.”
No matter that Miss Roselie Stratton spoke six
different languages. Read several others.
That she could decipher the letters her father
received from his far-flung acquaintances—reports
from the chaos of Paris, the courts in Russia, and
the far-off wilds of the young United States.
With ease she trailed after her older brother, Piers,
without detection and, to his horror, submitted
reports to their father as to his transgressions. And
when he complained about Roselie’s high-handed
ways, she would argue that their sister Margaret
hardly counted as a worthy adversary and, that
perhaps Piers and his friend, Poldie, ought to try
harder if they wanted to avoid detection.
And no one argued with that point.
But despite Roselie’s natural talents that should all
but guarantee her entry into the shadowy side of the
diplomatic agents her father inhabited with ease,
there were two words that Roselie heard over and
over.
Never, and that other hated utterance, Impossible.
So when her beloved father, the man who asked her
opinions on world events and had given her free
rein, died suddenly, those two words became the
fence around her life.
Never. Impossible.
They rose like a solid barricade, set into place by
her mother, her sister, her governesses, even Piers,
who had eventually forgiven her for always being
such an incorrigible tattletale.
So eventually Roselie stopped asking.
Stopped dreaming.
That is, until her first Season in London. In the very
first week she’d taken her place in the ton as a
newly minted debutante.
In one fated night, everything changed.
And Roselie had no choice but to stop listening to
what was considered impossible, to what could
never happen.
Because, quite frankly, she had a devil to stop and
a war to win.
Even if no one wanted her help.

4 May 2017 | 20:20
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*************episode 1*************** “A lady agent? How utterly ridiculous. A woman could never do what we do.” Lord Howers London, 1811 “Smile, my dear Miss Stratton,” Lady Essex Marshom advised. And not for the first time. So Roselie did her best to smile. It was a Herculean effort, to say the least. She glanced around the crowded room at Almack’s and wished she could be more like the other girls. That her only concern was who might ask her to dance. Or if she should have worn her green ribbons or her blue ones. Or whether she needed new slippers. But she wasn’t like other girls. After all, she’d been out in London Society for four long years—a veritable eternity in the ton. Nor in her favor was her complete lack of interest in frippery or likely candidates. Actually, she was rather proud of her ability to send suitors shying for the hills. And she would continue to be too sharp, too bossy and whatever else it took to maintain her freedom. Because quite simply, marriage would ruin everything. Especially when she had work to do. She checked once again—and yes, the note she’d been slipped by one of the servants was still tucked in the top of her glove. She wouldn’t have a spare moment to read it until she got away from this crush, most likely until she got home . . . and bother . . . that was still a few hours away. The note that might be the answer to all her prayers. Years of work. The last bit of evidence she needed to bring down her enemy, the Marquess of Ilford. For he was her enemy, as much as he was England’s. And nothing would deter her from seeing him pay for his heinous crimes. But in the meantime . . . Her frustration got away from her, and she sighed. More like, groaned. Quite loudly and rather unbecomingly. “Miss Stratton!” Lady Essex chided. “The company tonight may be thin, but a lady never reveals her boredom. Why look at Miss Taber! How fortunate Lady Muscoates is to have a ward who illuminates every room she enters.” Her ladyship tapped her fan against her chin as she examined the fetching girl across the room. “Though I must say, a ward should never be that pretty. Rather, indecent, don’t you agree, Mariah?” Her hired companion, Miss Mariah Manx, nodded in agreement. “However, Lady Muscoates is French, is she not?” Lady Essex huffed a sigh, as if this explanation was not only utterly correct, but also vexing. “Yes, of course. She’d never tolerate having some unfortunate creature foisted into her care, now would she?” Mariah winked at Roselie, having done her best to change the subject. But the diversion hardly lasted for Lady Essex was truly a terrier at heart, especially when it came to matchmaking. Not that the dear woman had any hope of seeing the infamous Miss Stratton betrothed on her watch, but if anyone was willing to give it a try, it was Lady Essex. And so she went back to her earlier refrain. “Miss Stratton, smile.” “I shall endeavor to do my best, my lady,” Roselie told her, smiling sweetly. Mariah smothered a laugh—one her ladyship didn’t notice. Roselie wished she could be like Mariah, who hid her own secrets with enviable ease. But tonight of all nights, Roselie’s slim patience was worn threadbare and got noticeably thinner especially when Lady Essex fluttered to life as a quartet of gentlemen arrived just before the doors closed. A striking fellow in a captain’s uniform stood at the lead. Captain Benedict Hathaway, if Roselie was to hazard a guess, especially given his remarkable resemblance to the man beside him, Mr. Chauncy Hathaway. Though Mr. Hathaway was hardly worthy of note—handsome, but a second son with no prospects, Captain Hathaway caused a stir. More so than the man who followed, Lord Budgey—rich, for certain, but such a nobcock hardly anyone of note considered him eligible. Then came the last fellow. And to Roselie’s credit, she kept from groaning out loud. For the last arrival was none other than Bradwell Garrick, the seventeeth Baron Rimswell. Her other nemesis. And not because he was a traitor. No far from it. If there was anyone in London who could unmask her, it was her old childhood friend, Brody. What the devil was he doing here? Not that he didn’t belong. Elevated to his brother’s title two years earlier, he was considered quite the eligible parti. Worse, he’d grown into a handsome devil. Dark hair that gave him the look of a poet, while his reputation for being a bruiser at Gentleman Jim’s and his penchant for hard riding could all be seen in the lean lines of his tall, athletic build. All around them, there were more than a few feminine sighs as he entered the room. Including the one that Roselie managed to keep tightly bound inside her heart. That he sent this racing desire through her every time she saw him, every time they had to be in the same room, was exactly why she avoided him. Nor could she do much more than cross her fingers as he made his usual sweeping search of the room, his gaze pausing on her for that slightly too-long second, offering her the slightest of nods—a poor homage to how close they had been growing up. As his gaze continued on, she did sigh. Which, of course, Mariah noticed. “Might be time to tell him.” Roselie shook her head, her reply rushing out. “No.” For Brody wasn’t just a handsome, eligible parti, he was also an agent for the Home Office, although that was not well known. But Roselie knew. As did Mariah. For they’d made it their business to determine who could be trusted and who might interfere with their plans. With Lady Essex having moved off to have a good coze with one of her friends, Mariah leaned closer to avoid being overheard. “This is all becoming too dangerous.” Roselie agreed, but she wasn’t about to admit as much. “You sound as stodgy as Lord Howers.” TO BE CONTINUED.
4 May 2017 | 20:23
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I came early today
4 May 2017 | 20:36
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second to comment
4 May 2017 | 20:45
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I try sha.. Third to comment Next
5 May 2017 | 03:20
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cntinue
5 May 2017 | 04:22
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nice start
5 May 2017 | 04:22
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Following
5 May 2017 | 07:18
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bring it on
5 May 2017 | 09:09
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Ride on i dey feel u.
6 May 2017 | 11:32
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dis grammar sef no go block persin head
6 May 2017 | 16:42
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**********episode 1b*************** . . . . . Perhaps you should heed his advice,” Mariah told her. “For once.” Roselie ignored her. Much as she ignored Lord Howers. Not that Mariah was done. Good heavens, her friend had worked for Lady Essex for far too long. She was starting to sound like the persistent old gel. “Ask for his help.” “He won’t.” Roselie turned to her. “The first thing he’ll do is to tell me to stop. Immediately. Then he’ll lecture me as to the impropriety of it all. And then, I imagine, he’ll tell me I don’t know what I am doing.” Mariah, on the other hand, did not share that opinion. “He’ll surprise you.” “I doubt it.” Shaking off her own misgivings, Roselie continued in a different vein. “Abigail will be off tonight. She’ll no longer be in danger. We’ll have everything she’s gathered and have a full report to Howers before the end of the week. And then—” A matron came by, slanting a glance at the two, and the pair smiled back. Only after she was well out of earshot did Roselie continue. “And then Asteria will quietly retire.” “Yes, of course she will,” Mariah said, sounding anything but convinced. “She, um, I will.” Roselie straightened and smiled, for here was Lady Essex glancing over at them. Asteria. Oh, what a ridiculous nickname those fools in the Home Office had come up with for the mysterious lady who’d often been spotted with some of London’s less-polite denizens. How she’d like to tell them, one and all, that she was certainly no goddess and definitely not immortal. Still, better a fool’s moniker than having one of them actually discover her true identity. Like Brody. She’d eluded him more times than she could count and he’d nearly caught her twice. Nearly. But more disarming was the very notion that he’d never once recognized her. Her. Roselie Stratton. Yes, yes, it was entirely contradictory that she didn’t want him to know what she was doing, but oh, good heavens, she’d like to take him by both shoulders and shake him until his teeth rattled. How can you not see me? No, instead he found Asteria entirely fascinating, and her? She knew all too well his opinion of her. Then again, he hadn’t really looked at her, not in years. Not like he had when they’d been children. Not since she’d been trundled off to school in Bath, and he’d been sent away to Eton. Oh, but truly, the worst of it was that she saw him. And knew. Knew what it was like to have him kiss her. Thoroughly, recklessly. To have him touch her, and leave her trembling. Twice now, he’d caught her. Twice, she’d escaped him. But not without collecting those damned memories of those stolen moments. His lips. His touch. The way he drove her mad until she was trembling and quaking. Asteria, that is. Proper Roselie Stratton wasn’t supposed to have such ruinous experiences. It was her curse, her punishment, she supposed. Outside, she must appear the demure, innocent miss, while inside blazed a courtesan’s heart and desires. But how she longed to see Brody’s gaze filled with desire for her. That dangerous promise in the turn of his lips. Longed to see him look for her. Roselie. If Asteria dared to continue, certainly one night, Brody would come to realize the truth. She knew that. But this would not be that night, she vowed. It was impossible. Or so she told herself. “Is it my mistake, or are we completely outnumbered?” Captain Benedict Hathaway asked as he stepped to the front of the line. “Tonight is Lord John’s Folly,” Chaunce provided as he took his place beside his brother, glancing with his usual droll disdain and unruffled demeanor at the scene before them that would have sent most men running for the borders of Scotland. For every man in the room, there were at least five young ladies. And all of them seeking husbands. And they were ably reinforced by their equally determined mothers. “So are you telling me, that while the rest of London’s male company is cavorting with every pretty petticoat and willing Cyprian over at the earl’s, we are here?” The captain glanced over his shoulder at the third member of their party. “Rimswell, I demand an explanation for this dereliction in duty.” Brody, having inherited his title two years earlier after the untimely death of his brother, was now quite used to such scrutiny, though even he had to admit that tonight offered the added ghastly sense of being tossed into the Coliseum with a pack of hungry lions. Still, it wouldn’t do to show any fear. Instead, he grinned at Chaunce’s brother. “For a man who boasts of never having lost a battle, you look rather bilious, Captain,” he teased. “Afraid of a few chits?” “A ‘few chits’? Good God, man, I’ve never faced such odds,” the captain admitted. “The French have the decency to shoot at you.” Lord Budgey, bringing up the rear, had stopped behind the captain and was now blinking owlishly around the much taller man. “Devilish odds, you say? I do like them when they are in my favor.” The man shouldered his way to the forefront with far more bravado than one would have expected from the rather mild-mannered viscount. “How is that?” Brody asked, wondering how much Budgey had imbibed before they’d found him at White’s to make him so pot valiant. “Have you finally decided to take a bride, Budgey, my good man?” It was an old joke, but apparently a jest no longer. “Mother’s quite keen I marry, and I suppose if I must, I might as well do it now. After all, tonight I’ll actually be in demand.” He made—what he probably assumed was—his triumphant march into the very bosom of London’s Marriage Mart. Brody and Chaunce exchanged a glance and followed their friend quickly. It was never a good idea to leave Budgey to his own devices. “I thought you didn’t want to marry,” Chaunce reminded him when they caught up with him. Most likely hoping to nudge the man into a hasty retreat. Budgey blinked. “I don’t. But—” “Mother says—” Brody and Chaunce chimed in at the same time. Budgey ignored them. “This is no time for your japery. Rather, I’d appreciate your opinions on the present company and then a glowing introduction to the future Lady Budgey.” “I’m not sure you’ve thought this through, Budgey,” Brody told him. “Every chit in this room already knows who you are.” Budgey pursed his lips. “Indeed? Oh, bother, that’s rather unfortunate.” “Why is that?” Captain Hathaway whispered in an aside to his brother. No matter, Budgey heard the question. “If you haven’t noticed, I’m a bit of a nobcock.” Captain Hathaway was polite enough to feign surprise. “No, no, not in the least.” Budgey shrugged. “Obviously I’m not trying hard enough tonight.” He looked around again and then leaned closer, confiding in a low voice, “You might not have realized it, but my foolish demeanor is a rather clever disguise.” Brody and Chaunce exchanged bemused glances, for this wasn’t the first time they had heard this explanation. Budgey continued confidently, “Yes, well, the more foolish I appear, the less I’m bedeviled by chits scheming to be the next Lady Budgey. A most enviable position, I assure you.” He glanced up at Captain Hathaway. “You should try playing the fool, sir, if you want to survive the night.” Chaunce opened his mouth as if to add something, but his brother staved him off with a quick warning. “Don’t you dare—” “But—” Chaunce continued, for this was such a golden opportunity to bring his puffed-up younger brother down a notch or two. .. . . .. .. To Be Continued.
6 May 2017 | 21:15
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nxt pls first 2 comment
7 May 2017 | 02:21
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7 May 2017 | 12:12
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ride on
7 May 2017 | 14:47
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***********episode 2************** . . . .. . “Say it,” Benedict warned, “and I’ll tell that matron over there—the one with the enormous collection of feathers sprouting from her head—” “Lady Nafferton,” Brody supplied. “Yes, thank you,” the captain said before turning his attention back to his brother. “I’ll tell this Lady Nafferton that a distant uncle of ours has died and left you a rather large house and tidy fortune to go with it.” Benedict winked at Chaunce. “Devilish bit of luck and all.” Chaunce paled at the very suggestion. So much for his reputation as one of the Home Office’s most fearless agents. “You wouldn’t dare—” Benedict folded his arms across his chest and rocked on the heels of his boots. His expression was one of pure devilish delight. Try me. But Chaunce always had just one more shot. “Do it, and I’ll summon Mother to Town.” The fearless and daring Benedict Hathaway went positively green. “Now that is uncommonly foul.” Brody couldn’t help but join in, leaning over to ask, “Captain, who do you fear more, your mother or the French?” Before the captain could rise to his own defense, Budgey wedged his way into the conversation. “If you don’t mind, I’d like to find my bride before eleven so we can head over to St. John’s. If we get there after midnight, all the decent lightskirts will be taken.” Now this was a plan Captain Hathaway could endorse. Whole-heartedly. He rubbed his hands together in glee. “Yes, let’s.” His enthusiasm was most likely due to the fact that he wasn’t the one about to be dropped into the parson’s trap. Budgey was more philosophical. “Might as well join in, Brody. There’s no hope for either of us. We both must marry eventually.” “Ah, Budgey, don’t you recall,” Chaunce drawled, “our Lord Rimswell is holding out for someone else.” Chaunce winked and Budgey barked a laugh. “Ah, so you have someone in mind,” Benedict said with a knowing tip of his head—though he didn’t understand the joke. “Is she here tonight?” “She might be,” Chaunce supplied. “If he knew who she was.” “The beguiling Asteria,” Budgey waxed. “I daresay, where is something to drink, we should be toasting this rarest of Diamonds.” “Asteria?” Benedict repeated. “Remind me, for my classics are a bit rusty, but isn’t she the last immortal to live with a man?” “Well, done,” Chaunce told him. “And here Mother always said our tutor’s fees were wasted on you and Benjamin.” Benedict ignored him and turned to Brody. “Who is this Asteria, your mistress?” “Mistress!” Budgey laughed and nudged Chaunce. “Our Brody is far too respectable and proper to keep a mistress.” “I’m hardly—” Brody protested, not that the others were listening. “Who is this paragon then?” Benedict persisted. “No paragon,” Chaunce corrected. “She’s a myth.” “Marry her myself if she wasn’t a figment,” Budgey added. “She’s no figment,” Brody told them, despite the fact that he’d sworn he wasn’t going to get into this argument again. “She’s as real as you or I.” “Introduce us, if you will.” Chaunce smiled with that aggravating Hathaway superiority. “Yes, that’s right. Would like to meet her,” Budgey added like a Greek chorus. “If you can’t, I think you owe us all a round of drinks for having to listen to you all these years.” “Leave off,” Brody told them. “When I catch her, you’ll all owe me.” “What’s all this?” Benedict asked, not liking in the least being left out. Chaunce snorted. “Lord Rimswell believes there is an English lady who works for the Home Office or for—” “—the Russians,” Budgey added quickly. “My money is still on the Russians.” “She isn’t Russian,” Brody shot back. “So you say,” Budgey replied, completely undeterred. “The real point is,” Chaunce said, “that Old Ironpants would never enlist a woman into the service. Howers has even said as much.” “We have no idea who her master might be,” Brody reminded them. “Yes, but we all know who would like to master her,” Budgey replied and the other two laughed. Brody ignored the jibe. He’d heard it more than once. But then his temper got the better of him. “She was at the Setchfield Ball, just last month,” he told them, folding his arms over his chest. He hadn’t seen her in ages, and suddenly, he’d spied her across a ballroom, but the devilish minx had disappeared before he could corner her. “She was there.” “So was Napoleon if you believe Lady Maugham,” Chaunce added, for he’d been sent by Lord Howers to reassure the ninety-year-old, half-blind marchioness that, no, the French emperor was not ruining the social circles of London. Budgey shouldered his way back into the debate with the best argument of all. “Even if she is real, what then, old friend? Take her home to your mother? Explain that her new daughter-in-law has spent most of her time in the worst gaming hells and corners of London? That will never do.” Brody hardly wanted to marry the woman. He just had this unrelenting need to find her. To unmask her. To know her. One more time. Two years earlier Brody had heard all the whispers about the lady roaming the night and didn’t believe a word of it. Until he found himself in the open doorway of Lord Howers’s office and saw the slight, hooded figure leaning over his superior’s desk, pen in hand as she dashed off a note. There was no mistaking that this was a woman, for a yellow gown peeked out from her dark cloak. The bright color, like a daffodil, stood in stark contrast to the shadowed room. Just like the woman herself. He tried to breathe, tried to say something. This was her. The one everyone had been speculating about. Asteria. Standing before him in the shadows of Lord Howers’s office. A rush of questions trampled through his thoughts. Who the devil is she? What the hell is she doing here? How had she gotten in? Truly, how the devil had she gotten in here undetected? Granted it was late at night—more like nearly dawn, but still—someone should have seen her. Demmit, no wonder the country’s secrets were being sold right and left, if just anyone could wander into the heart of the Home Office unaccounted for. So who the hell was she? The only light came from the nearly guttered candle atop the desk, and it was beginning to sputter. Not even the rising dawn, which was only now beginning to tease away at the night, offered him a clear view of this enigma. Not that anything in his world was clear anymore. Look at the past night—he’d spent it searching for an Admiralty clerk who was rumored to be selling secrets to the French. And in the last hour, Brody had found him. Dead in an alleyway. Knifed in the heart. And the papers? Lost. England’s enemies were at their very doorstep. The entire world being torn apart by the French. His world at the very least. And here she was. The mysterious Asteria. Traipsing quite neatly into the middle of it. Along with the Admiralty’s lost papers. For there they sat, all neatly tied up like a bloody Christmas package. “Who the hell are you?” The words, not so much a question as an order—blurted out. She jumped a little and then stilled. Apparently she’d thought the building as empty as he had. Slowly she straightened, her face the last thing to rise to meet him, but to his chagrin, her features were well covered by a black silk mask. . . . .. . . To Be Continued.
9 May 2017 | 15:33
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10 May 2017 | 07:40
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fire on
10 May 2017 | 08:17
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I am not getting this story o
10 May 2017 | 11:19
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10 May 2017 | 13:42
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Sorry am late
10 May 2017 | 14:22
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Next Nyc..
10 May 2017 | 17:37
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**************episode 3*************** “My lord,” she said, tipping her head in acknowledgment, but not before he saw something in her eyes—a sense of sadness and shared understanding—the sort that spoke of grief and anger and frustration. All the things running rampant through him of late. Bloody hell, she knew who he was. Exactly who he was. For it was there, in her proper address. My lord. The title wasn’t an honor, more like an open wound. You are Rimswell now. Your brother is dead. Brody’s unexpected elevation—not a fortnight ago— sat on his shoulders like a festering reminder of all he’d lost. “My lord, are you well?” “Don’t call me that,” he told her, entering the room and closing the door behind him. Her gaze flicked from the door then back to him. If she was concerned about being trapped, she didn’t show it. “I’m sorry about your brother.” Condolences? From a thief? It hardly made sense. But one thing did. That voice. He looked up and saw a bit of panic in her eyes. She did know him. And so, he certainly should know her. “Don’t speak of him.” The words came biting out, filled with the bitter anger that had raged inside him since the news had reached London. Even as he spoke, her chin tipped slightly, warily, her eyes narrowed. Good. She should be nervous. He wagged his chin a bit. “You might want to take off that mask.” She tipped her head just so, a flirtatious movement. “Why ever would I want to do that? I think you prefer it on.” It wasn’t a statement. It was an offer. One that sent his blood coursing through his veins. Passion that wasn’t meant to soothe or to slake, but a means to drain him of this pain he was in. So if this was how she wanted to play this charade —to tease and tempt him, then it was a game in which he was willing to join in, for he had every intention of winning. Did she think he couldn’t unmask her? That he wouldn’t? But there was a rub to all this—unmasking her would require getting closer. Very close. Touching her. Not that he was opposed to handling her—she was a bundle of temptation—but he hadn’t forgotten there was a dead clerk in the alleyway. One who’d been knifed by someone standing very close to him. “Did you come to steal those?” he asked, nodding at the papers on the desk, easing closer because the overwhelming need to unmask her went against every bit of his usual common sense. “Hardly. I’m returning them,” she shot back. So she wasn’t the only one harboring a raft of anger, for notably in her moment of resentment, her accent disappeared. That voice. Good God, he knew it. He could place it. At least, he thought he could. And from the set of her jaw and how her eyes widened in alarm, she knew it as well. He took another step closer to the desk. With steely determination, she held her ground. And then in a soft subtle motion, one that would make a courtesan weep with envy, she straightened and her cloak fell away to reveal a low-cut gown—a yellow silk that practically illuminated the night—clinging to her body and revealing why the other agents had sworn her a goddess fallen to earth. She certainly had the form of one. Long lines, breasts that threatened to spill out of the low-cut bodice and curves meant for exploration. The mask stopped just above a mouth meant for kissing—full lips and a generous turn. And turn they did, in a smile that any man knew was meant as an invitation for immeasurable pleasures. Oh, yes, this Asteria was an intoxicating vision meant to beguile and distract. And a wry stray thought occurred to him: he could easily eliminate the Nafferton sisters from his list of potential suspects. So who is she? The question hammered at him. “I’m here to help,” she offered as if answering his silent query and adding a whole list of others. For her words purred in invitation, ruffling down his spine with temptation. Help . . . Help me out of my gown . . . Help me out of my mask . . . Help me give you what you want. “I doubt that,” he replied, his gaze dipping from her face to her breasts and back up. No wonder the agents who’d seen her were mad to find her . . . uncover her . . . cover her. “You’re not a fool, my lord,” she told him, folding her arms over her chest and giving him the same sort of once-over he’d given her. From the wry tilt of her lips, he felt every bit of her regard. Scant regard. Bloody hell. What was wrong with him? After all, he’d caught her. Brody’s body tensed. Now she was just growing tiresome. Toying with him. Tempting him. Pushing him. Leaving him off-kilter. He nodded toward the papers on the desk. “I know what those are,” he said, looking up at her. “How did you get them?” “That is none of your concern.” She rolled her shoulders a bit and pushed off the desk as if she was ready to depart. But perhaps she hadn’t noticed, he was between her and the door. The closed door. “The hell it isn’t my concern. I’ll have you tried for treason.” After I unmask you. After I . . . A bit of laughter bubbled from her lips. “This was treason until I stopped it.” “Then murder, I’d say. For the clerk who stole those papers is dead.” That wrenched her gaze up and gone was that smug, mocking light. “De-a-ad?” He offered a curt, tight nod. “Did you kill him?” “No!” The word shot out. “I didn’t—” Her hand reached for the desk, steadying her. Brody moved closer, coiling inside. “Why should I believe you?” She straightened again, her gaze glancing around the room, measuring. “Why is it so hard for you to believe that I’m on your side? I’m here, aren’t I? Returning the papers the Admiralty lost.” “Oh, you’re here—but whether to help or to steal, I’ve yet to discover.” And then he moved, stalking around the desk. “Whoever you are, you shouldn’t be involved.” One of her brows arched loftily above her mask. “Why is that?” Did he have to state the obvious? Apparently so. “You’re a woman.” She chortled a bit. “About demmed time you noticed.” What the devil did that mean? He ignored the familiar niggle that ran down his spine and continued. “This is no business for a lady.” “And what if I wasn’t a lady?” she asked quietly, as if testing the waters. He wasn’t about to wade in. “Go home. Leave this —” “To the men?” She shook her head. “If you haven’t noticed, a woman recovered these documents before they got into French hands. My work is necessary. You need me.” You need me. Oh, the defiance behind those words. The conviction. She was going to get herself killed. The murderous events of the night merged into his recent loss, his grief, his anger, his frustrations, all of it boiling over. Of late, he’d hardly known himself, bedeviled as he was with a wrenching sort of discontent, rage. He had vowed not to give in to the crushing grief that the news of Poldie’s death had wrought . . . but now . . . This woman, taunting him, daring him. She’d raised his blood, his ire, and demmit, he’d have his answers. He’d have her. His arm snaked out and caught hold of her, yanking her close. She stiffened, and her eyes flashed angrily. “You shouldn’t be doing this,” he told her. .. . . . TBC
15 May 2017 | 20:39
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Why or are you scared
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When you visit any of our websites, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. This information might be about you, your preferences or your device and is mostly used to make the site work as you expect it to. The information does not usually directly identify you, but it can give you a more personalized web experience. Because we respect your right to privacy, you can choose not to allow some types of cookies. Click on the different category headings to find out more and manage your preferences. Please note, that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience of the site and the services we are able to offer.