Do not all you can; spend not all you have;
believe not all you hear; and tell not all you know.
(Romanian proverb)
Faint fingers of dawn crept across the somber sky. The early morning air was damp and chill and noxious, the sanitary arrangements in Edinburgh’s Old Town being considerably inferior to the New, which made not a whit of difference to footpad or resurrectionist, randy young buck or supersensible creature or Lady Alberta’s ghosts.
Ravensclaw wondered how Miss Dinwiddie felt about ghaisties. She would doubtless tell him in good time.
He climbed the exterior stair to his front door. His servants, accustomed to their master’s nocturnal habits, were long abed. Val made his way up the inner stairway to his own chamber, where he found Drogo stretched out on the hearth, and Machka and Miss Dinwiddie stretched out on his bed. One of them was snoring. He doubted it was the cat.
Drogo rolled over on his back. Val paused to scratch the creature’s belly before he walked closer to the bed. Machka opened one incurious eye and yawned.
Emily’s spectacles lay abandoned atop a stack of correspondence. Society business, he gathered from what he could read upside down. A water kelpie had been sighted, in the form of a handsome man with seaweed in his hair instead of a bullish black beast with two horns.
Val wondered who had written the account. Water kelpies were prone to lure the unwary to watery graves.
Given the opportunity, Emily would more likely lure the kelpie to his.
She wore her necklace of charms, which was of no more practical use than the poppy seeds she scattered outside her bedroom door with the absurd notion that the undead had a compulsion to count everything in their path.
On the other hand, he wouldn’t be at all surprised to discover she had hidden an axe in his pillows.
One bare foot peeped out from beneath the practical cotton wrapper that she wore over her voluminous night gown. A fragile little foot, with painful-looking blisters. Miss Dinwiddie’s new slippers hadn’t fit her any better than the role she’d played in Lady Cullane’s elegant drawing room.
She turned her head on his pillow. Tendrils of hair had escaped from their braid to frizz around her face. Val slipped his hand under her foot, rubbed her sole with his thumb.
...
She lay on the woolen rug before the fireplace. He lowered his lips to her throat. Pleasure hummed through her veins. His teeth found her pulse, and nipped. A strange melting sensation, a growing warmth—
...
The young woman was preoccupied with throats. Val decided to advance her understanding a little bit.
...
His lips slid along her silken skin to the soft flesh of one breast. He teased her rosy nipple with his tongue until it pebbled, begging him for more. His mouth closed around her. She moaned.
...
Her scent surrounded him. Not garlic now, or lavender, but an erotic female perfume that made his nostrils flare. Emily. Wake up.
She opened her eyes, peered nearsightedly at him. You said you weren’t what I thought you were. You lied.
Val traced the arch of her foot. What did you expect? I am vampir.
She considered this, and the hand that clasped her. Are you lying now?
No. Are you frightened, little one?
Maybe. Emily watched him trace a pattern on her ankle. What are you doing to my foot?
Caressing it. Do you mind?
Oh. She blinked at him. On the hearth, Drogo stirred. Machka opened one green eye and reached out a sharp-tipped paw.
Emily snatched back her foot and tucked it under her nightdress. “What are you doing here?”
Val shrugged off his jacket. “I sleep here, remember? Perhaps I should ask you the same thing. This is hardly so large a house that someone might get lost.”
Emily fumbled for her spectacles and plopped them on her nose. “You said we would speak tomorrow. Well, now it is tomorrow, so don’t try and put me off again. Have you found out anything about the athame?”
No, nor had he tried to, having had more urgent fires to douse. “Has anyone ever told you that you are as tenacious as a cockleburr?”
“Papa, when he was trying to keep things from me. Don’t change the subject. I take it you did not.”
Val did not feel inclined to explain himself. “You wanted to warn me about your Mr. Ross.”
Emily looked away. “He’s not my Mr. Ross.”
Val shrugged out of his coat. “Nonetheless, you know him well.”
“Not half as well as I once believed I did.” Emily toyed with the edges of her sash. “Thanks to your insistence that I appear at Lady Cullen’s dratted musicale, Michael thinks I followed him to Edinburgh.”
“Why should he think you followed him? Unless you told him of your suspicions, and that you found his talisman. Did you return it to him, by the way?” Casually, Val removed his waistcoat and cravat.
Emily’s cheeks reddened. “He claimed it wasn’t his. Before my papa’s death, Michael was, ah, courting me. He may think that we’re betrothed.”
Val pulled the velvet cord out of his hair. Scooted Machka out of the way and sat down on the bed. “Miss Dinwiddie, you are a femme fatale.”
Emily adjusted her spectacles. “Don’t poke fun at me. I should have realized it was all moonshine. Michael wants to marry me and thereby gain control of the Society and my pocketbook. However, I have decided that I don’t want to marry anyone. Papa managed matters so I wouldn’t have to, despite the fact that the law doesn’t find females fit to manage their own affairs. Do stop regarding me as if I were some raree show exhibit. You aren’t taking this seriously enough.”
If so, it was understandable: Val had during the countless years of his existence been hanged, shot, and staked, none of which had been particularly pleasant, but he had lived (so to speak) to tell the tale. “You are serious enough for us both. If Ross did steal the athame, he didn’t have it with him last night.”
Emily’s expressive eyebrows climbed halfway up her forehead. “How do you know that?”
Val raised an eyebrow of his own.
She glared at him. “I fail to understand why your servants are so devoted to you. Unless you’ve swayed their minds.”
“That would be unsporting of me.”
“And you never take advantage?”
“We have strayed from the subject. Indulge my curiosity, Miss Dinwiddie. Most young women would settle for marriage at any price.”
“Most young women are not as great an oddity as I am. Papa was almost pathetically grateful when Michael began to pay me court.” Emily drew up her legs and wrapped her arms around her knees. “My parents had a marriage of convenience — her dowry and his convenience, that is. They rubbed on well enough together for the most part, except on such occasions as when his experiment with a reverse magnetosphere went awry, and we had rabbits in the drawing room, and Mama fainted into the teapot. I want more than that for myself.”
“I see,” said Val, and so he did. Miss Dinwiddie was an heiress. Every fortune hunter in Scotland would be hanging on her skirts. Or they would be if they knew about her situation, which wasn’t likely, given the young lady’s eccentricities. Thus, the field was left clear for Michael Ross.
Rather, the field had been left clear. Val had already arranged to introduce his ungrateful houseguest to what passed for Polite Society in Edinburgh, ostensibly to help her in her quest. She would hate every moment spent among her peers, and thereby amuse him even more. Maybe he would engage in an additional altruism, since she was clearly too impulsive to be left dashing about on her own, and make her financial status known. Val didn’t imagine for a moment that Emily would thank him for it, which made the notion even more piquant.
Emily puffed up her cheeks and blew out an exasperated breath. “This is all far off the point! It is vitally important that we retrieve the athame. Why don’t you just reach out and find the blasted thing?”
“Because I cannot.”
“Oh. I assumed your extramundane senses— Isn’t that unusual?”
“Yes. It may have been due to the bagpipes, or because I wasn’t close enough, but I learned nothing from your Mr. Ross last night. Yes, I know he isn’t yours, but I’m afraid you must act for a little while as though he is.” It took no extramundane senses to hear the sound of grinding teeth. “If you will recall, it was our intention to flush out your fox.”
“He’s not my fox.” She eyed him. “Why have you finally admitted what you are?”
It hadn’t been solely for his entertainment, Val conceded to himself, although entertained he was. “I don’t know that I did.”
“I have never heard of a vampire with memory problems. Although, all things considered, I can see why it might be inconvenient to have encyclopedic recall.” Val settled himself more comfortably. Emily cast a sideways glance at the strong thigh that pinned down her skirt. “I understand there is more than one traditional way to become a vampire. Were you set upon unawares and drained to the point of death?”
Val hoped Miss Dinwiddie’s inquiring mind wouldn’t be the death of her. Or him. “I’m sorry to disappoint you. It was nothing like that. I became what I am by choice.”
Emily watched him stroke the cat. “Why would anyone become a vampire by choice? I do not mean to be insulting, but it is difficult to embrace the notion of drinking blood.”
She had many more questions. He answered them as best he could. Val was not accustomed to being regarded as a scientific curiosity. He found himself equal parts annoyed and amused.
“Most females who find their way into my bed,” he said, when his inquisitor paused for breath, “don’t do so with interrogation in mind.”
Emily sighed. “I’m being unforgivably pushing, aren’t I? It’s just that you are my first supersensible creature and there are so many things I’d like to ask. Are you afraid I can’t keep a secret? I promise you I can. Is it true that the nonliving have remarkable regenerative powers? Hugely heightened senses? The ability to cloud people’s minds?”
Val was going to have to cloud her mind. Eventually. He reached out and caught her hand.
She studied their intertwined fingers. You’re going to do that thing again. Where you read my mind.
Eventually, but not yet. I won’t do this again unless you wish me to.
Images flooded his mind. Images of the circumstances under which she might wish such a thing, which had to do with nibbles and kisses and nips.
And then he saw nothing, as if she’d slammed shut a door.
Val glanced at the window and the brightening sky outside. “I promise you will have your answers, and retrieve your stolen property. But now, you must return to your room, before the rest of the household begins to stir.” She looked rebellious. Go! commanded Val.
She went. He lay back on his bed, imagining the so-curious Miss Dinwiddie’s reaction were he to turn into a corpse before her eyes.