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“Excellent,” said Cordier. “I’m glad we’re all in agreement.”

She opened her mouth to retort, but his large, firm hand wrapped about her upper arm and exerted a light but inescapable pressure. She looked down at his hand, then up at him. In a properly ordered world, the look she gave him would have shriveled him to a husk that would burst into flame, leaving a tiny speck of ash behind.

He did not regard her at all. He was nodding at Lurenze and saying something in Russian to Vimstikov. All the while, the big hand continued to exert its inescapable pressure. To her fury, the light touch was sufficient to lift her from her chair and push her to the door.

“Cordier,” she said between her teeth. “If you do not let go of me I will kick you where it hurts, and do it hard enough so that you won’t soon forget it.”

“Are you always this thick?” he muttered. “Isn’t it obvious? I’m trying to help your little friend.”

Chapter 5

The sun set, and up rose the yellow moon:

The devil’s in the moon for mischief; they

Who call’d her CHASTE, methinks, began

too soon

Their nomenclature; there is not a day,

The longest, not the twenty-first of June,

Sees half the business in a wicked way

On which three single hours of

moonshine smile—

And then she looks so modest all the while.

Lord Byron

Don Juan, Canto the First

The dirty truth was, James wasn’t thinking clearly.

At one point he was listening to Giulietta, trying to learn what he could about her friend. But behind her, at the corner of his vision, sat the friend and Lurenze. James caught scarcely one word in ten of their conversation. He didn’t need more to grasp the meaning. He was aware of Bonnard leaning toward the prince to give him an unobstructed view of her breasts. James heard clearly enough the change in her tone, how it became softer and more seductive.

Then he was murmuring polite excuses to Giulietta, and rising from his seat and walking toward the pair: the dark head, glimmering with pearls, bent so close to the fair one, as though they were sharing secrets.

He saw Bonnard applying her siren’s arts to the young prince and her victim practically wriggling with delight, like a puppy having his belly scratched.

James found himself one furious heartbeat away from lifting her out of her chair and carrying her bodily from the opera box.

Luckily, lying was second nature to him, costing him nothing. A conscience was something he’d owned at one time, but it was a very long time ago, and he couldn’t remember much about it.

The lie had worked, and that was what mattered. Though he could feel her anger pulsing in the air between them, she did not threaten him or argue as they left the opera box. When she encountered acquaintances on the way downstairs, she appeared completely at ease, chatted briefly, and left them smoothly.

Like so many of her ilk, she was an excellent actress. She might be longing to plunge a dagger into his black heart but she made a good show of going with him peaceably out of the theater.

When they stepped out into the night, James was relieved though not altogether surprised to find her boat in readiness. Her gondoliers were reliable men, Zeggio had confirmed. Their ancestors had served Venice’s great families for generations, protecting them from treachery both political and personal. Thus, when James said quietly, “Don’t take the usual way,” Uliva didn’t seek confirmation from his employer but simply nodded.

Soon they were making their way along the Rio delle Veste past the crowd of vessels converging at the Fenice’s rear door.

Mrs. Bonnard settled into her seat in the posture he remembered from the time he’d played Don Carlo. She leant her elbow on the edge of the open window, rested her cheek on her knuckles, and looked out at the passing scene.

She was shutting him out, as she’d done then.

He wished he could shut her out. He’d closed the door unthinkingly. The space inside the cabin had shrunk and, even with the windows open, felt too small, too close.

Though the gondola glided smoothly through the water, now and again a movement brought her hip against his, her shoulder against his upper arm. The skirt of her silken gown slid against his trousers. The breeze gently entering through the casements traveled toward rather than away from him, carrying her light scent to his nostrils.

He needed a distraction. An argument would do admirably. But he refused to be the one to break the silence. He stared hard at the pearl and diamond bracelets hanging upon her gloved wrists and tried to occupy his mind by calculating their worth.

Finally, when they were clear of the theatergoers’ boats, she said in a bored voice, “So, you were helping Giulietta. How gallant of you.”

“I thought you needed only a hint,” he said. “It was hard to believe you meant to keep the boy prince to yourself, since you don’t really want him.”

“It’s unwise to let men believe one wants them,” she said. “They only presume.”

The scornful glance she threw him was as easy to read as a tavern sign.

He told himself to ignore it. He couldn’t. “You mean me. I’m presumptuous, you’ve decided.”

“You seem to be under the misapprehension that I’ve been languishing for your company,” she said. “Let me quiet your anxieties. Last night my mind was disordered by shock and my reason overcome by gratitude. Such is not the case tonight. You lost your one and only opportunity with me.”

“That is not why I removed you from the theater,” he said.

“It wasn’t because of Giulietta,” she said. “That was a thin excuse if ever I heard one—as thin as the one you gave Lurenze.”

He’d no reason to feel embarrassed, James told himself. He lived on thin excuses.

But as easily as he might find it to lie to everyone else, he was unable to lie to himself. He couldn’t pretend he didn’t recognize the real reason he’d dragged her away. That she recognized it, too, made the heat race up his neck. He felt like a fool. No, it was worse than that: He, a professional, had let himself turn into the impetuous boy he’d been a lifetime ago.

Meanwhile she remained unmoved, her silken cheek still upon her hand, her green gaze shifting lazily from the scene outside to him.

“And you were toying with Lurenze in hopes of making me do exactly what I did,” he said.

To his surprise, she smiled. “It worked, did it not? Men are so easy. They’re so competitive.”

James made himself smile, too. “So true. We’ll fight over anything, even if we don’t really want it.”

“If you’re trying to crush my vanity, you must do better than that,” she said. “Pray recollect that I am a divorcée, Cordier. I’ve been insulted and slandered by experts.”

He felt a sharp inner twinge. It couldn’t be his conscience, since he’d left his in France ten years ago. It was…irritation. “Pray recollect that I’m not a coddled royal of one and twenty, Mrs. Bonnard, but a man of one and thirty who’s seen something of the world. You are not the first woman who’s tried to drive me to distraction.”

“I haven’t begun to try,” she said. “When I do—if I do—you’ll know it.”

“You tried your damnedest last night.”

Her sleek eyebrows went up. “You think that was an effort?”

“I know a lure when I see one.”

“All I offered was a mild yes,” she said. “Very mild. Only the first notch above a no. Were I to make an effort—and no great one, either—you’d never withstand it.”

James recalled the siren laughter. He felt a prickle of uneasiness but he shook it off. “You have a high opinion of yourself. But the king’s ransom in pearls you’re wearing is not proof that you are irresistible, only that some men are weaker than others.”

Some man had been weak, indeed. He shifted his gaze from her haughty countenance to the top and drop pearl earrings, then down to

the two pearl necklaces circling her throat. From the upper, shorter one dangled pear-shaped drops of graduated size, the largest at the center. It pointed to the space between her breasts, whose rapid rise and fall told him she was not so indifferent as she pretended. The low-cut gown, of silk the color of sea foam, reminded one of the pearls’ watery origins. The pearl and diamond bracelets at her slim wrists glimmered against the butter-soft gloves.

The jewels alone constituted a cruelly arousing sight for a man who was a thief at heart. It was maddening that he couldn’t simply steal them and have done with her.

“You don’t think I could bring you to your knees,” came her voice, cool and taunting. “Would you care to make a wager?”

His attention snapped back to her face.

The tension in the felze increased by a factor of ten.

“I don’t wager with women,” he said. “It’s unsporting.”

“Men so often say that when the truth is, they can’t bear the mortification of losing to a woman.”

“I don’t lose,” he said.

“You will,” she said. “Let me see. What shall it be?” She closed her eyes briefly, thinking. When she opened them, they glinted. “I know. There’s a peridot parure at Faranzi’s shop that took my fancy.”

“Merely peridots? You don’t rate your powers very high.”

“I’m rating your income,” she said. “You’ll find these peridots painfully expensive. You’ll have to borrow to pay for them. But they aren’t beyond the borrowing abilities of one of Lord Westwood’s younger sons.”

“I see. You wish it to be not merely a costly wager, but a painful and humiliating one.”

She nodded. “Well?”

“And if you lose?”

“I won’t,” she said. “But if it soothes your masculine pride to imagine you’ll win, then by all means choose a forfeit.”

The letters, James thought. The reason I’m obliged to tangle with you. All I want is the damn letters, curse you. But even if that had been completely true, if the letters were all he wanted, it was the one forfeit he couldn’t ask for.

“The peridots,” he said.

That did surprise her. She took her hand away from her cheek and tipped her head to one side, studying him.

“They’ll be a gift to my betrothed,” he said.

She blinked. “You’re betrothed?”

It was an easy lie, too easy. He was far too angry to utter it. “Not yet,” he said. “But before too long. It will be a fine symbol for my bride-to-be. It will signify my ability to defend my principles and honor in the face of all-but-irresistible temptation.”

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