Название: The Widow's Secret
Автор: Sara Mitchell
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Историческая литература
Серия: Mills & Boon Historical
isbn: 9781408937990
isbn:
She has fear, all day. Needs help. You are good man. A servant like me. I clean house, you help lady.
The maid’s extrapolation of Secret Service to Secret “Servant” touched him; he wished her mistress shared Katya’s wordless trust and was surprised by Mrs. Tremayne’s docility, though he doubted it would last. For a few blocks they drove in silence. But the late-afternoon sun was warm, the sound of the steady clip-clop of hooves soothing, and eventually Mrs. Tremayne relaxed enough to shift in the seat, and glance up into his face.
“Katya is very perceptive, for all her youth. I’m surprised she refused to accompany us, but she’s obviously taken a shine to you. Even if you were taking me to the police station to be arrested, Katya would tell me not to worry.”
“I’m not taking you to the police station. I have no intention of placing you under arrest. The motive behind this outing is to banish your worries, which I’m sure you know achieve nothing but wrinkles and gray hair. A fate worse than death for a lady, wouldn’t you agree?”
“Unless the lady has a head full of garish hair.” At last she smiled, the rueful sweetness of it arrowing straight to Micah’s gut. “But thank you all the same. I’m much better.”
“God gave you a beautiful head of hair, Mrs. Tremayne. Why not celebrate it?”
He might have struck a match to tinder. Temper burned in her eyes and the words she spoke next were hurled like fire-tipped darts. “Operative MacKenzie, we may or may not have to endure each other’s company in the future. If we do, please know that the next time you feel compelled to utter any divine reference, however oblique, I will leave the room. Do I make myself clear?”
“Perfectly. Since we’re traveling in a buggy along a fairly crowded street, however, I’ll be especially careful how I phrase my remarks.”
Well, he’d known the docility would not last, but he hadn’t anticipated such a violent reaction. Micah wondered who had poisoned her mind, not only about her hair color, but about God. On the heels of that question, it occurred to him that her comments might be a clever ploy, designed either to draw attention to herself or to deflect probing questions about why she had abdicated her status as a member of the Bingham family.
If she’d been a different sort of woman, the watch with its vital evidence might still be hidden in her music chest.
A stray breeze carried to his nostrils the faint whiff of the gardenia scent that permeated her house. It was a poignant, powerful scent and threatened to turn his professional objectivity to sawdust. Micah’s hands tightened on the reins. “I do have a secondary motive for this drive. If you don’t mind, I’d like to stop by and talk to Mr. Hepplewhite a moment. See if perhaps Benny Foggarty returned.”
“Certainly.” She drew her jacket tighter, but at least her response was civil. “I’d enjoy seeing Mr. Hepplewhite again myself, if only to have him vouch for my character.”
Micah prayed the old watchmaker would do precisely that, since his own view of Jocelyn Tremayne Bingham was regrettably distorted at the moment. For the next few blocks he stared between the horse’s ears, excoriating himself. The Secret Service had spent years tracking the most vicious network of counterfeiters in the agency’s brief history.
Operative Micah MacKenzie was not sharing a buggy merely with a distraught, vulnerable woman. He was sharing a buggy with the widow of the man whose family—eight years earlier—had arranged for the murders of three people, one of them Micah’s father.
Micah glanced sideways at her profile. Sunbeams streamed sideways into the buggy, turning her freckles a rich copper color. It was difficult to nurture suspicions about a woman whose face was covered with copper freckles.
When they reached Broad Street, throngs of pedestrians, buggies and bicycles choked the roadway as well as the sidewalks.
“Strange,” Mrs. Tremayne commented in a warmer tone. “I’ve never seen such a crowd on a Wednesday afternoon.”
Micah, who had spotted several policemen’s helmets in the crowd, made a noncommittal sound as he maneuvered the buggy down a side street, pulling up in front of an empty hitching post. “We’ll have to walk from here.”
He helped her out of the buggy, noting with a tinge of masculine satisfaction the color that bloomed in her cheeks at the touch of his hand. At least the attraction appeared to have buffaloed them both. She quickly freed herself and stepped onto the sidewalk—directly into the path of a newsboy racing pell-mell down the sidewalk. Boy, cap and newspapers tumbled to the ground. Jocelyn staggered, and Micah swiftly clasped her elbows, swinging her off her feet.
The feel of her exploded through him like a tempest. He managed to gently set her down on the sidewalk, then knelt to help the newsboy to give himself time to recover, no mean feat since his hands tingled, and his fingers still twitched with the memory.
Streams of people flowed around them, glancing indifferently at the boy’s plight as they hurried along toward the corner.
“Thanks,” the newsboy said, his voice breathless. “Didja hear what folks is saying? A murder. Right down the street! I ain’t never seen nobody dead, so’s I was hurrying.” He gawked at Jocelyn while he stuffed newspapers under his arm, then flashed Micah a quick grin. “I never met nobody what had more freckles than a salamander, either.” He grabbed the last newspaper, leaped up and scooted down the sidewalk with the agility of a squirrel darting up a tree.
Micah stood, dusting his hands, a frown between his eyes.
“I’ve heard less flattering comparisons over the course of my life,” Mrs. Tremayne offered with a rueful smile. She glanced down the walk. “Operative MacKenzie…”
“Why don’t we stick with ‘Mr.’? It’s less of a mouthful.” Forcing a smile, he casually stepped in front of her. “Crowd’s a tad unruly. How about if I take you home? I can talk to Mr. Hepplewhite another time.”
“I’m not deaf. I heard what that child said. He was probably exaggerating. People don’t get murdered in downtown Richmond.” She darted a quick glance up into his face, stubbornness darkening her eyes. “We’re already here, and I’d like to see Mr. Hepplewhite. If you want to wait in the buggy, I’ll go by myself.”
Micah lifted a hand, stroking the ends of his mustache to hide a reluctant smile. “I’m sure the masses would part like the Red Sea for you, Mrs. Tremayne. But my mother would nail my hide to the door if I neglected my duty.” He gestured with his hand. “Shall we?”
By the time they reached the millinery shop two doors away from Clocks & Watches, the crowd swarmed eight deep, sober business suits mingling with day laborers, shop workers and a surprising number of ladies.
“Can’t believe it…shocking…”
“…in our fine city…”
“…murdered…lying on the floor…”
“Who would…atrocity…such a nice man…”
Micah casually moved closer to Mrs. Tremayne, whose complexion had turned sheet white. Her lips СКАЧАТЬ