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    Mission_Improper

    Page 4
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      they were going to beat the sun home, so he opened

      the door and... nothing. Apparently."

      "An earl." That was going to be bothersome.

      The aristocratic Echelon might no longer be in

      charge of the city, but they could make things

      difficult if they wished to. "No wonder the London

      Standard is haunting us."

      "I thought it might have been your pretty eyes

      they were captivated with," Ingrid said, appearing

      at his side with little fanfare. "Are we going in or

      not?"

      Copeland's eyes widened as he took her in,

      bearing

      all

      the

      hallmarks

      of

      masculine

      appreciation. "Ma'am. Unfortunately we've got

      orders to—"

      "Keep the scene's integrity preserved," Ingrid

      finished, practically batting her eyelashes at the

      man. "Until Malloryn's unit gets here."

      "Ah, yes, ma'am." Copeland's stance softened,

      a smile flickering over his mouth.

      Byrnes bared his teeth. It might have passed

      for a smile. He hoped. "Well, I think we're the elite

      unit you're waiting for." Tugging a sealed letter

      from his waistcoat pocket, he shoved it in

      Copeland's face before the bloody idiot could fall

      at Ingrid's feet in worship.

      "What have you gotten yourself into, Byrnes?"

      Brasham asked, taking the letter off a flummoxed

      Copeland and examining it.

      He smiled. "Trouble, hopefully."

      "Only you would say such a thing." Brasham

      shook his head. "Through you go."

      Grabbing Ingrid’s hand, Byrnes tucked it in

      the crook of his arm and escorted her through. Ava

      and Charlie followed, Ava lugging her precious

      carpetbag along with her.

      "Keep your mind on the job," he told Ingrid as

      the gates shut behind them. "Copeland doesn't

      deserve your games."

      That earned him an arched brow. "Who said

      they were games? He has pretty eyes. And you're

      the one that insisted that I play your partner. If you

      cannot handle it, Byrnes, then do be a dear and

      speak up."

      He was going to throttle her. Slowly. Or

      maybe kiss her. He hadn't quite decided.

      "This way." Ingrid swept under his arm and

      headed across the grass, shooting him a knowing

      glance as she went. "Some of us want to see the

      scene of the crime."

      The Venetian Gardens had been crafted for

      pleasure. Both upper and lower classes could buy

      their ticket in, and there were often fireworks,

      acrobatic shows, and pavilions where parties

      could be hosted. Broad canals crisscrossed the

      sprawling gardens and white lacquered gondolas

      sat in a row at the boarding docks, bobbing up and

      down in the breeze as they waited for night to fall

      and passengers to come.

      "Which way is the Grand Pavilion?" Byrnes

      asked.

      "You've never been to the Venetian Gardens?"

      Charlie Todd seemed surprised.

      "Not really my sort of affair," Byrnes replied.

      "He's more interested in gambling dens than

      in garden parties," Ava added, with a tsk of

      disapproval under her breath.

      "Oh, but this place is so much more than that.

      This way," Charlie called, heading toward a huge

      pavilion that was circled by Georgian pillars. It

      dominated the grassy space, and french doors

      opened on all sides to reveal the room within.

      "Anyone approaching the pavilion should

      have been seen," Byrnes noted.

      "It was dark," Charlie replied, raking the

      roofline. He pointed. "If I were going to enter

      unseen, I'd use those trees for cover, then climb

      them to get to the roof."

      "That doesn’t negate the fact that the grass

      surrounding it provides inadequate coverage,"

      Byrnes shot back. Bad enough working with Ingrid,

      let alone all three of them.

      "Let me look inside," Charlie replied.

      "There's got to be a way that someone got in and

      out—with all the guests—without being seen by

      the staff."

      "If Carrington was an earl, then there's high

      chance he was a blue blood," Byrnes said, looking

      around. Not every single member of the Echelon

      had been infected with the craving virus that had

      once been considered an elite privilege, but most

      of the upper nobility were. Or the males, at least.

      Females were considered too prone to hysteria and

      overruling passions to be able to control

      themselves should they suffer from the bloodlust.

      Accidents happened, of course, and there were

      both rogue blue bloods like himself, whose

      existence hadn't been sanctioned, and a handful of

      female blue bloods.

      "He was a blue blood," Ava said, flipping

      through her notes. "It was in the earlier report at

      Malloryn's."

      A man fidgeted by the entrance to the

      pavilion, his stained fingers holding a half-smoked

      cigarette, though his glazed eyes stared at nothing.

      Byrnes held out his hand. "Caleb Byrnes,

      Nighthawk."

      "Silas Compton," the fellow greeted, "I'm the

      manager of the Venetian Gardens."

      "We'll leave you to it," Ingrid murmured,

      taking Charlie and Ava inside with her.

      Byrnes watched them go. "You're the one who

      found the earl and his guests missing?"

      "Aye." Compton ground his cigarette out

      among the stubby corpses of several other half-

      finished blunts. Though his clothes were distinctly

      upper class, his hair was rumpled and signs of

      disorder streaked through, with his crooked tie and

      an inch of shirt that hung loose at his waist.

      Clearly bothered by the ordeal.

      Byrnes flipped open his notebook, filing that

      away for future notice. "Do we know how many

      guests were in attendance?"

      "Got the register from the gates," Compton

      announced. "Thirty-two of them remained at this

      late hour, sir. Including the Earl. Plus there were

      eight attendants from the Venetian Gardens, taking

      away the food platters and the glasses."

      "So forty people are missing altogether?"

      Byrnes glanced up from the notes he was writing.

      "Sounds like a small private party for an earl."

      "Birthday party, by all accounts. Carrington's

      pockets are shallow, according to gossip."

      Compton shrugged. "Been hit hard by the

      Revolution and the new laws."

      "I would have thought the Pavilion to be

      expensive to hire."

      "It is. Not as bad as some, but appearances

      have to be kept, sir."

      "So Carrington was trying to balance the party

      between affordable, but stylish enough to pretend

      he didn’t care about that sort of thing. Minimal

      guests, not a lot of food and drinks, that sort of

      thing?"

      "Aye."

      Byrnes looked around. "You saw nothing?"

      "Nothing out of the ordinary," Compton

     
    replied. "And I've been racking my brain, sir. The

      doors were open and guests trickled out to watch

      the fireworks, then they went back inside. By the

      time I came around to alert everyone to dawn's

      imminent arrival, the doors were locked and

      nobody was there. Nothing but... a trace amount of

      blood, though that could have been from their own

      private flasks. The only person I saw leave was a

      beautiful woman who exited the party ten minutes

      before I came. I only noticed her because I was

      overseeing the arrival of crates of blud-wein at the

      time."

      "Can you describe her?"

      "Dressed in white, I think. Pale hair. Blonde,

      perhaps? I didn't take much notice, sorry sir. We

      were running short of blud-wein, so I was

      attempting to sort out that mess."

      "And you didn't hear anything?" Byrnes

      paused with his pen pressed against his notebook.

      "Nothing, but then that might have been the

      fireworks. There was also another party over the

      eastern side, and the gondolas were busy with

      other guests."

      Byrnes assessed his notes. "If you think of

      anything else, let me know," he said, handing the

      fellow his card.

      Then he was free to enter the pavilion.

      The room was eerily silent. A table by the

      wall held a row of champagne glasses stacked in a

      pyramid, and champagne lay flatly in the glasses.

      Ice buckets still held half-drunk bottles of blud-

      wein, judging by the coppery scent of it. There'd

      been an automaton orchestra in the corner, but

      they'd long since wound down, the automata caught

      in frozen tableaux over their instruments. Their

      glass eyes made him shudder. They alone might

      have been witness to whatever had happened in

      here, but nobody would ever know what they'd

      seen.

      "Over here, Byrnes," Ava called.

      The three of them were gathered in the

      northern corner. Someone had painted a bloody

      “0” on the gauzy curtains that surrounded the room.

      There were several blood spatters on the marble

      floors, but no other signs of a skirmish.

      "Do you think that's some kind of symbol of

      ownership?" Ingrid asked, staring at it.

      "Possibly." Every now and then he and the

      Nighthawks worked a case that was clearly

      committed by the same person. They all tended to

      have their signature tricks. Byrnes frowned,

      running his finger through the blood and then

      rubbing his fingers together. "It's tacky in some

      areas, but mostly dry."

      "Not fresh then," Charlie said, his nostrils

      flaring and his eyes darkening to a bottomless

      black before he turned away from the curtains and

      forced the hunger back down.

      The hunger had never overruled him before,

      but Byrnes knew that other blue bloods sometimes

      struggled with its grip. "Is it going to be a

      problem?" he asked quietly, and Charlie shot him a

      sideways look before shaking it off.

      "No time for dinner this morning," he

      muttered, his hand delving inside his pocket for a

      flask of blood. "That's all."

      "So we have forty people who are missing,"

      Byrnes commented, looking around. "And an empty

      room, with minimum signs of a struggle. How did

      forty people just vanish? That's what we need to

      know."

      "Through

      the

      roof?"

      Ingrid

      suggested

      dubiously.

      "People would have seen them leaving," he

      pointed out, then looked around.

      "Underground. It had to be through a tunnel.

      Perhaps there's an entrance to Undertown here,"

      Charlie suggested.

      "Perhaps." Byrnes shoved a table out of the

      way. Nothing beneath it. "Undertown was formed

      where the Eastern link of the Underground project

      collapsed. That's a long way from here."

      Charlie grinned at him. "You think like a

      Nighthawk, Byrnes. I'm a thief from Whitechapel.

      There's not a section of London that's inaccessible

      from

      below.

      There

      are

      tunnels,

      sewers,

      underground rivers, old plague pits... It's an entire

      world down there."

      "How do you think we ran the revolution?"

      Ingrid snorted, shoving aside a rug.

      And he was forced to remember that she'd

      once been a humanist, one of the founding members

      of the revolution that tore the prince consort from

      his throne.

      "I'll leave you to it," Ava said, scraping some

      sort of residue into a small glass vial that she had

      tugged from her carpetbag. "My place is not

      scampering through tunnels. I'll try and work out

      what this smoky residue is. It's dirtied the floor in

      areas."

      The three of them crawled across the room,

      shoving chairs and tables out of the way and

      peeling back rugs. Byrnes used his knife to feel

      around the edges of the large floor tiles, keeping an

      eye on the other two.

      "Got anything?" Byrnes called, watching as

      the lad paced a rug on the floors, sniffing at the air.

      Charlie flipped the rug out of the way, his

      face lighting up. "This tile is loose! I can smell

      blood."

      Byrnes crossed to his side and used his knife

      to feel the edges of the tile. It wiggled upwards.

      Clearly loose. "It's moving!"

      Charlie slipped his fingers under the edge of

      the tile as Byrnes pried it clear of the floor, and

      together they eased it aside. Beneath it was a grate.

      Hauling the grate out of the stone, Charlie set

      it aside with a ringing sound, wincing. "It's heavy."

      "Which means our perpetrator is either

      supernaturally strong, or they used a mechanical

      contraption to shift it," Ingrid said.

      "And someone stayed behind to ease the rug

      over the grate again." Byrnes considered what

      Compton had told him. "Actually, Compton said a

      beautiful woman left the party nearly ten minutes

      before he discovered the missing persons. She

      might have replaced the rug. I'll check the guest list

      to see how many women were on it."

      Charlie knelt beside the grate, peering into the

      darkness. "The scent of blood's clearer here."

      Fine. "Ladies first." Byrnes gestured.

      Ingrid lowered herself through the manhole

      and vanished with a splash. One of the things he

      admired most about her was her willingness to do

      what needed to be done in the pursuit of a killer.

      She hadn't even flinched at the scent wafting up out

      of the tunnel, and her knee-high boots and leather

      breeches meant she was dressed for the occasion.

      "Youth before age," Charlie said with a wink,

      and disappeared after her.

      "You all right here, Ava?" Byrnes called.

      "Fine." She waved a hand, absorbed in some

      kind of chemical test she was performing.


      Byrnes stepped through the open grate and

      landed in a splash of water. The predator inside

      him reared its head, his vision cutting through a

      dozen colors, and ending up in shades of black and

      gray as it intensified.

      Some blue bloods had trouble dealing with

      the other side of the craving virus: the darkness,

      the hunger. Instead of trying to control his darker

      side, Byrnes had learned to use it to hunt, and thus

      assuage the urge to kill. If he glutted his predator

      half on the thrill of the chase, then most of the time

      it left him alone.

      Just one problem now: he wasn't focusing on

      blood, or the scent of whoever had done this... No,

      all he could smell were lilies, and the heated musk

      of Ingrid's skin. His gaze locked on her, as though

      she were the prey.

      Focus. Byrnes curled his fingers into fists and

      closed his eyes, forcing himself to hone in on the

      droplets of blood in the water. It was more

      difficult than he'd expected.

      "I can smell several different perfumes,"

      Ingrid announced, splashing forward through the

      gloom. She tripped on something and caught

      herself. "Appears to be some sort of... tracks...

      underneath. Rail tracks?"

      "Not wide enough," Charlie replied, peering

      through the murky water. Enough light gleamed

      through grates set at varying intervals along the

      tunnel for them to be able to see. "Perhaps closer

      to what you get in a mine, or in Undertown, when

      you're using wheeled carriages to carry heavy

      objects."

      "Whatever it is, it's under ten inches of

      water," Byrnes pointed out. "So it hasn't been used

      for a long time."

      "Can you smell that?" Charlie asked, his

      nostrils wrinkling up, as they splashed along.

      "All I'm getting is that perfume." Byrnes knew

      he was a good hunter, but the rookery lad just

      might own better senses than he did.

      "Smells sweet," Ingrid murmured, her amber

      eyes a beacon in the dark.

      “And kind of rancid,” Charlie muttered.

      They moved silently through the tunnels, just

      in case whoever had done this was still here.

      "The scent of blood's getting stronger."

      Byrnes waded ahead, one hand on his knife, as he

      tracked the scent. “It’s— Oh.”

      A woman floated facedown in the shallow

      pool of water. Above her, the grate allowed weak

      sunlight through it, highlighting the edges of her

      rose-colored silk gown. A gown that was stained

      and bloody.

      Byrnes slowly rolled her over. Her abdomen

      was torn apart, like a feral dog had been at it, and

     


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