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    Mission_Improper

    Page 7
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    the most impassioned Debney had ever been.

      "You're not going to do anything stupid, are you?"

      "Why? Worried you'd be called in to identify

      the body? I'm sure such a thing would only be an

      inconvenience for you."

      Byrnes eyed the stiff way Debney sat. "I don't

      wish you ill. I've never wished you ill. It would...

      grieve me to see you dead."

      Debney raked a hand over his face, the sneer

      vanishing as something more akin to hopelessness

      filled his expression. "I'm not going to do anything

      suicidal. I'll leave that to you and your mad scheme

      to confront Ulbricht and his cronies." Looking up,

      his voice softened. "They're dangerous, Caleb.

      Those who speak out against them or threaten to

      reveal their secrets have a tendency to go missing.

      And we're talking about dukes and barons here,

      people in positions of power. If you think that your

      Nighthawk status protects you, then you're wrong."

      "I'm used to dealing with dangerous people,"

      he replied, crossing to the secretary and rifling

      through the piled up invitations there. He finally

      found the one he wanted and tapped the invitation

      against his thigh as he turned back to Debney. "It's

      made out in your name."

      "Of

      course."

      Debney

      frowned,

      then

      understanding dawned. "You can't use it yourself."

      "Why not?" Undercover work was one of his

      fortes. "Just how large is this gathering going to

      be?"

      "It doesn't matter how large it will be."

      Debney's gaze raked over him. "You're not.... You

      wouldn't fit in. They'd spot you from a mile away."

      Byrnes looked down at himself. "I mustn't

      have realized that my rogue blue blood status was

      emblazoned on my forehead. I might, however,

      need to borrow some clothes—"

      "It's not the clothes, or the fact that your

      infection was unapproved," Debney protested.

      "Christ, Caleb, it's the attitude, it's everything—

      even the calluses on your hands. You don't look

      like some idle aristocrat, and you never will."

      Which wasn't something that had ever

      bothered him. Byrnes arched a brow.

      "You look like you kill people for a living."

      Debney interpreted the look correctly.

      "Part of the job description sometimes. I don't

      do it for fun."

      Debney threw his hands up in the air. "Fine.

      Try your luck. I don't know why I should care. Just

      —if you're caught—then you need to make it

      abundantly clear that you stole that invitation from

      my house. I know nothing."

      Melodramatic Debney. Byrnes laughed under

      his breath. "I know nothing. I know what I’m doing,

      Francis." Heading toward the door, he paused, then

      added softly, "Thank you."

      "Wonders never cease," Debney muttered.

      It wasn't the first time someone had mentioned

      something along those lines. With a wry smile,

      Byrnes reached for the door, listening to the sounds

      of Debney shifting on the bed.

      "Before you go... how is Nanny?"

      And there went his equilibrium. "The same.

      Nothing ever changes."

      "I miss her." There was a note of quivering

      hesitancy in Debney's voice. "She was the only one

      who ever cared, you know? She always made me

      feel like I belonged to her just as much as you did.

      Out of all the people I've lost, she's the one I miss

      the most."

      That vacant stare, the way his mother looked

      at him as though he was a stranger.... His smile

      evaporated and Byrnes bowed his head for just a

      moment. "So do I," he said bleakly, and stepped

      through the door. "Get some rest and sober up,

      Francis. You're of no good to yourself like this and

      from the looks of it you need to be."

      INGRID STRETCHED IN HER BED, wondering

      what had woken her.

      The sharp rap came again.

      Ingrid froze for a single, heart-tripping

      moment, and then Byrnes popped the lock on her

      window, and lifted the sash. "Good afternoon."

      Ingrid let herself slump back onto her bed. "I

      must have missed the moment I invited you into my

      lodgings, Byrnes."

      "Oh? Miller, I thought that invitation ensued

      the moment you broke into mine? And I did knock.

      Good to see you're awake."

      "Barely," she growled, tossing aside her

      blankets and thanking God her cotton nightgown

      stretched to her knees. "What would you do if I

      told you to get out?"

      He blinked. Looked back at the window. "Get

      out, I suppose. Though I came here prepared to

      share information, and it's rather awkward to shout

      through the glass."

      Information.... That was unexpected. "I

      suppose you tracked me home last night?"

      "Not really. I followed your scent trail early

      this morning from Malloryn's." His gaze slipped

      away from her as she stood, an unexpected gesture

      of chivalry.

      But then, there was no challenge in this, and

      she hadn't invited him to view her bare legs, or the

      possible flashes of skin he'd easily make out

      through the thin cotton nightgown she wore.

      Crossing to the slatted timber screen, Ingrid

      considered his turned back. Byrnes would insist on

      an invitation. That was the only way he could tell

      if he was winning this game or not.

      And now she was in a rather interesting

      position of power.

      Ingrid flicked her honey-brown hair behind

      her shoulders, watching him over the top of the

      screen. "It's safe to look."

      Byrnes turned around just as she shimmied out

      of her nightgown. Cotton pooled around her bare

      feet and despite his immaculate control, his gaze

      dropped, eyes flaring wide, as though he hadn't

      expected it. The heat in his gaze sent a delicious

      shiver through her, despite the screen between

      them. Only the tops of her shoulders were

      revealed, and no doubt her feet and ankles, but she

      was still naked. An odd mix of nervousness and

      excitement sent butterflies scattering through her

      abdomen.

      Byrnes looked away as though he felt it too,

      taking in the bare state of the room. "You know, I

      overheard Malloryn offering rooms at Baker Street

      to Charlie Todd, and Kincaid. You could stay

      there."

      Ingrid splashed her face with water from the

      jug by the basin, then scrubbed her hair away from

      her face. "This is my set of rooms, Byrnes. I don't

      want to lodge with Malloryn."

      "What are all the rat traps for?"

      Ingrid barely suppressed a shudder. "Rats."

      "You need a cat."

      "I would have one, but for some strange

      reason they don't like my scent."

      "Strange." He almost smiled. "It quite sets my

      hair on edge too."

      She ignored that. "You're up early. I didn't

      think you'd be out and about
    during the day." That

      pale skin burned too easily, after all, and the bright

      sunlight half blinded him. Byrnes didn't like the

      vulnerability of day. That was one thing she'd

      learned in their previous encounter.

      "Haven't been to sleep yet." He was trying not

      to look at her. And failing.

      Ingrid dragged her green silk robe around her

      shoulders. Not that she was uncomfortable. She'd

      always been comfortable in her own skin. It was

      just... him. Knotting it around her waist, she

      stepped out from behind the screen. Byrnes looked

      at the nightgown still on the floor, and then back at

      her.

      "What?"

      His eyes gained that lazy, heated quality that

      she remembered from when she'd pressed him

      down onto his bed and licked a line up the center

      of his naked chest. Right before she tied him to his

      bed with her stockings. "Nothing."

      Liar.

      They were both back there, in that moment.

      Only, those memories were juxtaposed against

      reality: he was surely wondering if she was naked

      beneath the robe, right here, right now, and Ingrid

      was having trouble forgetting the sensation of his

      skin beneath her palms as she'd taken the chance to

      explore that night.

      Soft. Cool to the touch. Like stroking her

      hands down silk.

      Her fingers curled into fists. She was still

      angry with him. "So did you learn anything in the

      Nighthawks archives?"

      "How did—? Ava," he guessed.

      Ingrid crossed to her vanity and brushed out

      her hair. "Congratulations. You've set a new

      record. Not even twelve hours, and you were

      already going behind my back with information."

      His dark form stepped into view in the mirror,

      but Ingrid concentrated on her hair. It was either

      that or throw the hairbrush at him. And Rosa had

      given her the bone-backed brush. It was precious

      to her. Byrnes was not.

      "You're annoyed."

      "One would think you a prime investigator,"

      she replied mockingly. "Picking up on the mood so

      swiftly."

      "My apologies. It's instinct. I had a thought

      and followed it through to its conclusion. I don't

      work with others. Not well. You know that. But I'm

      here now. Apology... accepted?" That voice turned

      as smoky as sun-warmed honey.

      The brush caught on a particular knot, and she

      focused on it, tugging gently. Then the image of that

      pale, blank face from the autopsy penetrated her

      memory again. Imogen Moore. They had a name

      now. And a cause of death. And poor Imogen

      needed more than for Ingrid to risk this case thanks

      to her pride. She sighed. "You're not the only one

      with information, Byrnes. You share yours, and I'll

      share mine."

      Reaching inside his pocket, he produced an

      invitation, complete with gold curlicue writing. "I

      know what the letters SOG stand for."

      What? Ingrid put the brush down and reached

      for the invitation, but Byrnes withdrew it sharply.

      "Ah-ah," he said, sauntering back across the

      room. The black leather of his Nighthawks uniform

      did marvelous things for his anatomy. "Mine. I

      found it."

      "Where? And how?"

      "I remembered seeing a black flag symbol

      like the one we encountered yesterday on a piece

      of paper on Viscount Debney's desk one day. He

      told me that the Sons of Gilead are an anti-

      establishment group of Echelon lords, interested in

      returning to the status quo where blue blood lords

      rule over the human rabble and can own as many

      blood-slaves as they like. They use a black flag on

      all of their correspondence."

      "A symbol of anarchy," she muttered, then

      shook her head. "I don't see the point of their

      cause. Nobody would stand for a return to the

      'good old days.’ All of the downtrodden have had

      three long glorious years to realize what freedom

      means. They'd fight to the death to keep it from

      slipping through their fingers again."

      "It's the Echelon. Inconsequential details like

      the lower masses resenting such a return to the 'old

      glory days' mean nothing to them. They probably

      haven't even wondered what they'd be up against.

      They're led by a Lord Ulbricht. I don't know much

      about him, but Debney's terrified they'll crucify

      him. Seems to think that if I attend the party I'm

      practically begging to get myself killed."

      "We," she corrected.

      There was a pause as he digested this. "My

      clue," he reminded her. "My invitation."

      "Don't make this mistake again."

      "What mistake?"

      "This is precisely the way we set about last

      time." Somehow she managed to keep her vicious

      verwulfen temper in check. Somehow. "You began

      to hoard clues and I was forced to work by myself.

      Need I remind you what happened, Sir Leather-

      britches?"

      "No, you need not." His gaze dipped, just

      briefly, a quick glance that scored over the naked

      skin of her collarbones where the robe dipped.

      "I'm fairly certain I recall—in exact detail, mind

      you—what happened last year. Could you please

      put some bloody clothes on?"

      "What's wrong, Byrnes?" She sank into her

      chair, her robe sliding up her bare thighs as she

      crossed one knee over the other. A thrill of heat

      slid through her veins as she met his gaze with a

      challenge in her own. "Anyone would think you

      hadn't seen a naked woman before."

      "Anyone would think this an invitation," he

      reminded her, his nostrils flaring.

      "Well, it's not."

      "I know," he growled. "That's part of the

      problem. And I'm trying to behave, Miller. I'm

      trying to be a gentleman. I know I'm not allowed to

      touch. But this is both distracting"—he captured

      the end of her robe—"and tempting."

      Ingrid captured his hand before he could tug

      at her robe. Every inch of her body said yes. It was

      only the part of her that was still capable of

      rational thinking that knew this was a bad idea.

      "You want revenge."

      "Hmm, that wasn't a no."

      "No, it wasn't." She'd concede that, even if

      she wasn't entirely certain what it was. "I'm

      thinking about it."

      Byrnes's eyes flared with heat, the black of

      his pupils overtaking the blue of his irises, as the

      craving hunger within him flooded to the surface.

      He eased closer, reaching out to brush a lock of

      hair off her shoulder, his fingers grazing the silk of

      her robe and sending a ripple of sensation through

      her. "I want you naked and writhing beneath me,

      my dear. I want... everything."

      Hell. If she'd thought her body complicit in

      his seduction before, then she'd severely

      underestimated the effect he had on her. Her entire

      body ached. And she was... tempted. "What m
    akes

      you think I'd trust you?"

      The edge of his mouth curled up. "Then give

      me some rules to play by, my dear. Challenge me.

      I'll prove myself worthy."

      The thought captured her attention. A

      challenge. Yes. "Three challenges," she interrupted

      breathily. "Prove yourself trustworthy, and I'll give

      you a reward after each challenge is completed."

      "Be specific."

      So he hadn't let that go. She tugged the silken

      tie of her robe from his grasp and leaned closer. "I

      will. But all in good time, Byrnes. You wouldn't

      want to rush me. I know you're not interested in

      anything that can be won easily."

      He smiled and held his hands up, giving her

      an innocent expression. "Fine. I'll await your first

      challenge then. Just... don't be too long, Ingrid.

      Now, you were saying... about the case? I showed

      you mine, after all...."

      True. Curse him. Ingrid dragged her robe

      closed.

      "Thank you," Byrnes murmured, and sat on

      her bed. A clear foot of space separated their

      knees. "That was distracting me."

      It was meant to. But she looked away. "Ava

      finished the autopsy a few hours ago."

      "I know."

      "The girl's name was Imogen Moore. She's

      the niece of some baron, hoping to make a thrall

      contract with a powerful lord." Though the

      practice personally affronted her, Ingrid knew that

      not all young ladies were as privileged as she was,

      to be in command of her own life. For a young girl

      in society, perhaps becoming some blue blood

      lord's personal blood flask was the best option

      they had. And the fact that they earned pin money

      and gowns and jewels from their protectors

      probably made it seem a glamorous proposition.

      Probably. "Unfortunately Imogen attended the

      wrong party at the wrong time. Ava's certain the

      wounds to her abdomen were what killed her, and

      she's also fairly certain that they don't belong to a

      knife, an animal, or anything else she can imagine.

      The closest she could come to explaining it was

      presuming it was some sort of handheld threshing

      machine."

      Byrnes scratched at his jaw. "Looked like

      teeth marks to me. What's your point? What's new

      about this?"

      "Think about it, Byrnes," she said, leaning

      back in her chair. "If this SOG had anything to do

      with it, then why would they kill a girl of their own

      class? Or kidnap an entire party full of blue blood

      lords? How does that affect their cause?"

      That got his attention. "Maybe Carrington

     


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