TEN
Wallingford was halfway back to the first terrace when the answer struck him.
The cabinet.
He staggered to a halt and slapped his hand against his thigh.
Good God. Of course. She’d slipped out from under the automobile when they’d gone outside, and then darted into the empty cabinet when the carriage doors had rattled open again, the clever devil.
He slapped his thigh again, this time with his closed fist. A child could have figured it out. How they must be laughing at him now, absolutely doubled over at his witlessness. If they weren’t already locked in a passionate embrace, of course.
A pair of squirrels raced across the faint beaten-down grass on the path before him, squabbling angrily over some purloined delicacy, or else madly in love. Together they scampered up a towering cypress, one chasing the other, until Wallingford lost them in the branches.
The castle lay beyond, mellow red roof tiles against the blue sky.
A movement caught his eye, down among the trees: a flash of yellow, dipping in and out of view. A golden brown head, bobbing above the budding leaves, the unfolding bounty of springtime.
Roland, by God. Roland and Lady Somerton, deep in a tête-à-tête, oblivious to the world.
What the devil was going on around here? Was the entirety of bloody Tuscany falling in love before his eyes?
Wallingford looked up at the cloudless sky, at the sunlight pouring down from the heavens, and sighed.
What an astonishing shade of blue it was, this Italian sky. Depthless, concentrated, impossibly pure. On his leaving England two months ago, the sky had hung down like iron, quite impenetrable. He remembered leaning against the railing aboard the packet steamer for Calais and staring at the departing coastline until the drizzle had enfolded it whole, and the entire horizon had become one immense block of gray, from sky to shore to sea.
How distant it all seemed, against this landscape of blue sky and green hills and blossoming trees.
Joint by joint, his fisted hand began to relax against his leg, until his palm had fully opened and his fingers drummed lightly against his trousers. The noontime sun caressed the back of his head. After all that, he’d left his hat behind in the damned workshop. If he never set foot in it again, he should count himself happy.
Happy.
He sighed deeply, closing his eyes. For an instant, and for no particular reason, he found himself thinking of Phineas Burke’s face, eyes round with terror, as he’d stalked forward toward that dashed automobile.
A chuckle escaped him, without warning.
Are you, Lady Morley? Are you in love with my friend Burke?
The poor fellow.
Another chuckle, and another. Wallingford’s back began to quiver, his sides began to burn. The laughter built in his chest, exploding at last into the fragrant air, rattling the leaves in hearty gusts. He bent over and braced his hands against his knees, laughing without restraint.
“Signore?”
Wallingford started and looked up, expecting to see Giacomo’s face, compressed with disapproval.
“I beg your pardon. You are English, are you not? The English visitor?”
Wallingford straightened. It was not Giacomo at all. The man was of medium height, dressed in a well-tailored suit of summer flannel, hair neatly trimmed beneath his straw boater, dark eyes grave. His low voice carried hardly any trace of an accent.
“I am indeed,” Wallingford said. His mouth couldn’t seem to stop twitching. “Can I help you at all?”
“I beg your pardon. My name is Delmonico, a colleague of your friend Mr. Burke. I understand his workshop lies this way?” The man’s eyebrows rose in polite inquiry. He carried a small satchel beneath one arm, more of a portfolio, really. He shifted it to the other arm and straightened his hat with a nervous twitch of his hand.
“Why, yes. Yes, it does.” Wallingford turned and made a motion with his arm. A chuckle rose again in his throat; he managed with great effort to restrain it. “Straight down this path, through the clearing. A small building, a sort of old carriage house. You can’t miss it. But Signore Delmonico?”
The man was already tramping down the path. He turned and cocked his head. “Yes?”
“I’d advise you to knock first, my good man. Knock first, and sharply.”
* * *
The priest had just begun to pass his crooked fingers over the eggs in their bowl when Abigail felt Wallingford’s hand on her arm.
She knew it was his, of course. She knew it in the instant before it cupped her elbow, large and warm and light. She had felt him steal up next to her, among the servants and villagers filling the dining room. She had felt the tingling warmth of his body and the electric crackle of energy that seemed always to surround him, that was so essentially Wallingford.
“What’s this?” he asked in her ear.
“It’s the priest,” Abigail whispered. She was conscious of Alexandra, standing nearby on her other side, watching the ceremony with hypnotic fascination. So hypnotic, in fact, Alexandra hadn’t noticed Wallingford’s arrival in the slightest. “He’s blessing the eggs.”
“Blessing the what?”
“Shh. It’s a very solemn ceremony.”
Wallingford had been swimming, Abigail realized. He smelled of dampness, of clean water and fresh air. His hand remained at her elbow, light and respectful. What the devil was it doing there? Had they not parted last night on the iciest of terms?
Next to the table, Don Pietro reached for the holy water, borne on a tray by his server. Maria had been right: The young man was beautiful, golden haired and blue eyed, an archangel sent to earth. He had followed the priest obediently about the castle, keeping the water at the ready as the rooms were sprinkled, hither and yon, without regard to the decidedly Anglican bodies who resided among them. Nearby, Maria interrupted the stillness with a wilting sigh.
The eggs seemed to strain against one another, yearning for Don Pietro’s holy—if rather gnarled—hands. Abigail watched the water trickle from his fingers, to roll in delicate tracks down the fragile white shells. The faint sunshine caught on the droplets, making them glitter.
“Extraordinary,” murmured Wallingford, next to her ear.
“I gathered them myself, just this morning,” Abigail heard herself say, and nearly smacked her forehead with her palm over the inane statement. Inane? Her?
“Blessed indeed.” The hand dropped away from her elbow, leaving it cold, and then he was gone, idling through the small crowd of villagers, his dark hair still damp and shining above them all.
Abigail’s legs wobbled beneath her. What the devil had he meant by that? What the devil was he doing here at all?
Don Pietro was stepping away from the table. His assistant held out a stiff white linen cloth; he wiped his hands and handed it back and turned to Alexandra and Abigail. “Ora abbiamo il pranzo,” he said gravely, and turned away to greet the villagers. Wallingford stepped forward and made a brief bow. His face had set into careful formality, the Duke of Wallingford greet-ing an honored guest, dark eyebrows low and sharp on his forehead.
“What did he say?” Alexandra whispered.
For an instant, Abigail thought she meant Wallingford.
She gathered herself. “Oh, he’s just invited himself to lunch, of course!” She patted her hair beneath its modest scarf. “I do hope his assistant stays, too. Do you expect I shall burn in hell for it?”
But the eternal fires remained quite safe from the threat of Abigail Harewood’s occupation. When luncheon was laid, she could not take her eyes from the Duke of Wallingford.
He sat at the head of the table, Don Pietro at his right and the acolyte at his left. The young man, who had looked so golden and radiant as he passed about the house with his delicate pewter pitcher of holy water, seemed to pale into childishness next to the broad shoulders and severe features of the duke. Despite his lack of a valet, Wallingford managed to appear with flawless jacket and crisp collar, with his necktie folded credibly, and all the gravity in the room seemed to sink somewhere into the beating heart of that well-tailored chest. He was every inch the lord of the castle. He was magnificent.
Abigail, for the first time in her life, was unable to say a word.
Not that Wallingford spent the luncheon in stony silence. No, despite his magnificence, he acted the perfect host, chatting with the priest, in Latin of all things, showing himself an absolute master of classical grammar. Abigail had never heard his Latin before, had assumed him to have only the usual schoolboy proficiency, and his fluency astonished and rather humbled her. At one point, he turned to Alexandra, who sat next to the elderly priest, and troubled her for the salt; the seamless shift into English made Abigail start from her chair.
Alexandra laughed her obliging little laugh and said yes, of course, Your Grace, just as if they were not mortal enemies, and handed the salt in his direction. Without a pause, she turned back to the village mayor, who sat on her other side, and resumed her halting half-English, half-Italian conversation with him, using her long, elegant hands to illustrate what their limited common vocabulary could not.
Abigail looked down at her plate, at her broken-nailed fingers holding her knife and fork. She cut her roast lamb into small pieces, and placed each one in her mouth with quiet deliberation. Who was this polished and polite Wallingford? Was this his true character? Or was he simply a good actor, his manners gleaming from years of formal experience?
Did she really know him at all?
“Signorina?”
The whispered word made her start once more. She turned her head over her right shoulder. “Yes, Morini?”
“After the luncheon,” Morini said. “I must see you, after the luncheon. Is very important. We have the plans for tonight.”
“Of course. What plans?” Abigail said listlessly.
Morini put her finger to her lips and drew away.
“I beg your pardon,” said the man next to her, a burgher of some sort from the village. “You are speaking to me?”
The lamb was finished, and the artichoke leaves lay in a neat pile at the edge of her plate. Abigail picked up her wineglass and smiled over the rim. “I was not,” she said, in Italian. “But since we are speaking now, perhaps you can tell me, my dear sir, something of the history of this castle. The more I learn, it seems, the more questions I have.”