Dark Whispers
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Synopsis
Samantha Garver delivered a wickedly sensual debut in One Night to Be Sinful. Now she weaves an intriguing new tale of unlikely lovers unraveling a mystery shrouded in danger and dark desire... Uncommonly tall and extraordinarily independent, Harriet Mosley regularly rushes in where other ladies fear to tread. Indulging her taste for adventure, Harriet's friends pay for her to visit a house of spirits, rumored to be haunted by figments of its tragic past. Bow Street Runner Benedict Bradbourne is reeling from the loss of his business partner, who was murdered. Bradbourne's quest for vengeance has taken him from London's bustling streets and shadowy alleyways to a country estate whose corporeal residents may prove even stranger than the ghosts who supposedly dwell there. Intrigued by the bespectacled, mysterious Benedict, Harriet begins to feel the first flames of desire course through her blood. But in the dark hallways of the ramshackle manor, something more sinister than ghosts stalks--and will do everything in its power to keep Harriet and Benedict apart forever...
Release date: December 1, 2006
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 385
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Dark Whispers
Samantha Garver
The door opened without a knock and with no surprise the family in the front room looked at the man who entered. He was one of them, if not by birth, then by the friendship that bordered on that of a father and son with the man behind the closed door down the hall.
Wilhemina Ferguson managed a small smile as she disentangled herself from the two grandchildren clinging to her skirts. She used one hand to brush back the tangled gray hair that had come undone from its knot and held out the other to the newcomer.
“Benedict.”
Horror unlike any he had ever felt burned inside Benedict Bradbourne. It had begun pounding at his insides since Wilhemina’s oldest son had come for him. He refused to look at the others in the room, loathed seeing the faces of the children and grandchildren so haggard with loss. He did not take Wilhemina’s hand when she touched the back of his. Her fingertips were so cold he chose to ignore them as he did her children’s grief.
“Where is he?”
“Our bedchamber. It shan’t be long.” Her eyes suddenly filled with tears and she pressed a closed fist to her mouth. In a moment she composed herself to say, “I think he’s been waiting for you.”
Benedict had to control the workings of his throat as he strode down the hall that seemed longer than it had ever been before. He paused outside the closed door and squeezed his eyes tightly closed. Images of Garfield Ferguson played across his mind’s eye: those of him as a middle-aged man welcoming young Benedict and his siblings into his home, laughing through a mouthful of fish and chips, and cupping Benedict’s shoulder with a rough palm as the adolescent told of his mother’s death and recounted the trials of keeping what was left of his family together despite an unstable and often jailed father. As the man’s fiery hair became tinged with gray and Benedict developed the strong shoulders and independence of manhood, the images contorted to those of the two men crouching down behind an overturned wheelbarrow, Benedict keeping a band of thieves occupied with erratic bursts from his pistol as his mentor crept through the back door of the jeweler’s shop and then charged at the three like a rampaging bull—taking the crooks down just that easy. When those exciting memories gave way to thoughts of the pride in the old man’s eye when Benedict had his first commendation pinned to the front of his uniform, the earnestness as he insisted the younger man take part of his wages to care for his sisters—money the young man knew Ferguson could use for his own family—the man in the hall let his eyes open immediately to make the memories disappear.
The door opened into a silent room. Only one candle was lit, sending off brief flickers of light from the table near an opened window. Ferguson was a great mountain beneath the bedclothes, mostly in shadows. Benedict’s gaze focused immediately on the man’s large chest, and it took so long for it to rise and fall that the younger man began to worry he was too late.
Then Garfield said, his voice uncharacteristically weak, “Donna’ beat all, lad?” His brogue was worse than usual and Benedict doubted a man not from his home country would even understand the other. “All these years a tackling crooks and playing with me pistol an’ I git done-in by a footpad.”
Benedict approached the bed, sat stiffly in the chair still warm from Ferguson’s wife. The old man was pale, his skin the same color as the thick mustache and beard covering a good portion of his face. Benedict scanned his longtime friend, starting at his balding head and moving downward. A muscle in his jaw went taut when he saw the dark stain spreading across the blankets over the lower part of Ferguson’s belly.
“Knife wot got me.” Being at death’s door did not dampen the man’s ability to read the other’s mind. “A dagger or sheave mayhap.”
“Where?”
“Not far from the office. I didna’ even see ’im comin’.”
Benedict saw Ferguson frown, his heavy brows drawing together. His eyes darted across the ceiling as if searching for something.
The younger man looked at the floor between his feet then lifted his gaze to the hand lying limp atop the bedclothes. He reached for it.
“Thank you,” he said. “For everything you’ve done for my family.”
Ferguson coughed and laughed at the same time. “Ye did well by yer sisters, especially considering what ye come from. Ye would have done it even without an old codger like me in yer life.” The old man sighed. “I am proud to have known ye.”
Benedict met the other man’s eye. “You are my best friend.”
“An’ yer mine.” Benedict watched with a clenched jaw as a tear streamed down from the corner of Ferguson’s eye and into the pillow beneath him. When the younger man looked up again, his eyes were closed.
Benedict sat for a long moment with his teeth pressed tightly together before he removed his specs and brushed angrily at his eyelids with the heel of his hand. He was rising from the chair to tell Wilhemina her husband was gone when a fiercely strong hand reached out and grabbed his coat.
Benedict’s gaze flew to Ferguson’s face and he saw with surprised wonder that the old man’s eyes were opened wide and brilliantly cognizant. It was a familiar expression. The same Ferguson wore every time he understood the working of a crime, the sudden realization that brought a series of events together.
His head turned and he said to Benedict, “The watch. The bastard was after me watch.”
It was late, almost closing time, when the stranger entered the shop. He was tall, had a good two feet on the man standing behind the counter, counting up his sales for the day. He blended almost entirely with the dark outside until the door swung closed behind him—clad in black breeches and stockings, a long black coat, with a heavy scarf draped across the lower half of his face. A tricorn hat was pulled low over his brow and the newcomer made no move to remove it indoors, though he did touch its brim when passing the woman who had been perusing the books of poetry stacked on a far table. The heavy metal braces that encased the woman’s legs made a nerve-wracking creak as she turned to inspect another set of books.
The man behind the counter winced impatiently at the sound before saying, “Good evening, sir.” Green-brown eyes shifted in his direction. “The name is Christian. Welcome to my store.”
The stranger said nothing, but walked on quiet heels toward the counter. He had a stiff gait, keeping his shoulders square and his arms straight at his sides.
“I don’t believe we’ve done business before.” Christian tilted his head upward, squinting in an effort to make out anything besides the other man’s pale cheeks and straight nose.
The stranger shook his head and cleared his throat. “I’m looking for a book.”
“You’ve come to the right place, my good man.”
“I shall be the judge of that.” The stranger’s voice was low in his throat, nearly inaudible behind the wool of his scarf. His gaze roamed the walls lined with books, the lids of one eye drawn slightly together. “It is a volume by a Madame Winifred Lacey.”
“Ah . . .” Christian grinned. “The notorious Book for Lovers.”
“You have it, then.”
“Oh, yes. One copy left in the back. I keep it hidden so as not to alarm those with fragile faculties.” He nodded in the direction of the woman who had opened a volume of poems. Christian leaned over the counter and whispered, “Man to man, I’ve read Madame Lacey’s book and sorely wish my own wife was capable of perusing a few pages without having a fit of the vapors. She could learn a thing or two about doing more than laying stiff between the sheets.” Christian laughed.
The stranger did not and the bookseller sobered quickly.
“I’ll get the book then.”
“Do.”
When the proprietor of the bookstore disappeared into the back room, the woman who had been looking at the poetry books without really seeing any of them lifted her gaze. The stranger at the counter turned to meet her eye.
The woman with the poetry books couldn’t help it. She forced her attention toward the table and lifted a palm to stifle a laugh.
“Would you believe a woman was in here earlier today,” Christian huffed as he reappeared at the counter, “with the audacity to try to buy this book?”
“Is that so?” The stranger accepted the book with slim fingers encased in black leather gloves.
“Mrs. Emily Paxton, if you can believe that.” Christian had no eyebrows, so it was the pink skin of his forehead that bobbed up and down. “The Queen of Ice herself.” He did not see the stranger’s hand falter in removing a purse, nor the drawing together of tawny brows. “I did not give her the book, of course. I don’t give a bloody damn about her reputation as a ball-breaker or how much money she had to offer. A book like this is not meant for the eyes of a woman.”
The stranger ran a gloved finger over the elegant script engraved into the book cover, the name of the author. The fact she was a woman had somehow escaped the book vendor’s notice.
“It just isn’t suitable for women’s eyes. Their constitutions are too weak, you know.”
The stranger only stared at Christian.
The woman who had been at the poetry table moved slowly, fluidly despite the braces encumbering her legs, toward the exit.
The stranger in dark clothes almost made it to the door where the woman was tugging on her gloves before the silence was broken.
Christian watched the man come to a halt, saw the woman at the door glance backward with a worried little frown. Then the stranger’s head turned toward Christian. His eyelids were drawn together as he stared at the shopkeeper.
“Your wife may be the one to benefit, Mr. Christian.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“From your perusal of Madame Lacey’s infamous book. Perhaps it is not her fault, you see, she is so lackluster beneath your sheets.” The stranger’s eyes crinkled at their corners, as if he were smiling.
The two women sat in companionable silence as darkness crept up to the open terrace. The outside nook of the elegant café would have been crowded were it not so close to winter. As it were, there was a distinctive chill in the air and a slight breeze that played about the hems of the women’s skirts, as if toying with the idea of creeping underneath.
The two offered the oncoming stranger a brief glance, both noting his dark attire and the scarf that fluttered about his neck and over the lower half of his face. They might have dismissed the individual in the black stockings and breeches at that single look were it not for the large book he carried against one thigh.
Emily Paxton and Isabel Scott were struck with incredulity at the same moment, though Isabel showed hers in a shocked gasp and the other woman in only a slight lift to one sable brow.
“What’s a pair of beautiful ladies like yourselves doing out alone at night?” Familiar eyes sparked with mirth above the scarf.
“Harriet!” Isabel hissed, eyes wide as she took in the trousers that fit snug to the other woman’s legs.
Harriet removed her hat as she dipped into a bow. “At your service.”
Isabel rushed to her feet, pushing her spectacles up higher on her nose as she scanned their surroundings. Theirs was the only outside table occupied, but the inner clientele of the restaurant was visible. With an emotion akin to horror, she eyed the aging dowagers in their layered pearls and the plump gentlemen that accompanied them.
“What on earth are you about?” She did not look at Harriet as she lectured through her teeth. “You will be ruined if anyone sees you like this.”
Harriet felt the edges of her mouth curl even higher. She was touched that her friend thought that a woman who barely had enough funds to survive was so significant to London society.
“I should think no one will even bother looking this way,” Emily said between calm sips of tea, “unless you continue making a scene, Isabel.”
The other woman flushed and shifted back toward her chair.
Harriet gallantly pulled it toward her.
Isabel, appearing utterly nonplussed, swallowed deeply from her glass of lemonade.
Emily turned toward the woman dressed as a man as she took her own seat. “We took the liberty of ordering you a tea with a dollop of cream.”
“And brandy?” Harriet reached for the delicate cup.
“And brandy.” Emily nodded once.
“Thank you.”
Isabel carefully set her glass atop the pale linen tablecloth. She peered at the woman in the tricorn hat over the rims of her specs. “Harriet.”
“Isabel.”
“Would you kindly explain why you are walking about London in men’s breeches?”
“I’d have thought you knew.” Harriet noticed the plate of scones at the middle of the table. “Emily said she was certain Mr. Christian would not deal with a woman on a matter of business, especially not concerning a novel reported to go into details of sexual acts. I knew I had to do something extraordinary to obtain the book Lady deVane so kindly prepaid us to obtain for her. Especially if the piggish man would not give over to Emily, a force to be reckoned with.”
“Thank you,” Emily said. Though her lips moved only to form the words and her features were impenetrable, her eyes glimmered. She pushed the plate of scones nearer to Harriet.
“So you dressed like a man,” Isabel was saying, “pretended to be a man to deal with Christian?”
“Exactly.”
Isabel gaped at Harriet and then Emily. She shook her head when she realized neither woman grasped the oddness of their situation.
“You acquired the book,” Emily said.
Harriet, still chewing a sweet date scone, dropped the pastry onto her plate and lifted the book from her lap.
“Well-done, Harriet.” Emily removed a square of white cloth from her reticule and proceeded to wrap the book carefully in it. When passing on a book of sexual tales to an aging duchess, a little decorum was to be expected.
“Not to be a prude”—Isabel was frowning now, well aware she was a prude and unconcerned over the matter—“but I cannot imagine what might have happened had you been found out.”
“I’d like as not be thought a lunatic.” Harriet rolled her eyes in an imitation of madness.
“Do not make me laugh, Harriet.” Isabel smoothly changed her giggle into a muffled cough. “I am upset.”
Emily’s brows drew together. “Isabel is right. It was dangerous for you to go alone.”
“I wasn’t alone,” Harriet explained. “Abigail accompanied me.”
“Excellent.” Emily was appeased.
Isabel, still wide-eyed, downed the last of her lemonade in one swallow. It was the closest she ever came to hard drinking.
Harriet, who had already finished her tea, set her cup aside and forced herself to push away the last of the scones. “I thought you were to meet with the duchess in Hyde Park. Why did your note say to come here?”
“A man was attacked a few days ago while walking the park.”
Isabel sputtered, lifting a napkin to her mouth to stifle the sound as her eyes watered.
Emily was removing another book from a bag that had been sitting beneath the table. “It was a bungled robbery, I’m sure. Still, I did not want anyone going near the place at night.”
Harriet watched Emily as she flipped through the pages of the book then set it atop the table. She wondered if Mr. Christian or anyone else who dared to call her the Queen of Ice behind her back knew how she watched over her friends. Emily looked up and caught her stare.
“Happy birthday, Harriet.”
The other woman blinked in the shadows of her hat brim. Her gaze dropped to the book being pushed her way. It was the latest novel by Randal C. Shoop, her favorite author of tales of unhappy spirits and their desperate pursuits of revenge from beyond the grave.
“My birthday was yesterday.” She reached for the book, eager already to read the third story in a series about a dashing ghost hunter who solved the crimes of those dead and buried.
“We regret we couldn’t have been with you and Augusta to celebrate.” Isabel momentarily forgot the fact her friend was wearing trousers.
“We had a wonderful time by ourselves.” Harriet spoke fondly of the woman with whom she had lived for the last four years. “We went to a play, though I think her Mr. Darcy purchased our tickets. Abigail was at the town house on our return. She gave me a lovely valise and Augusta had wrapped together a very nice journal and a set of quills.” Harriet accepted both gifts with delight, though she never traveled and had nothing so interesting in her life occur that she felt the need to record it in a diary.
“All that and a book assured to be a good read.” Harriet grinned, lifting the book off the table. “What more could I ask for?”
A small envelope fell from between the pages and into her lap.
When her brows drew together in puzzlement, Emily spoke, looking as if she were holding back a smile. “There is more, Harriet. We were to have given it to you with the valise and quills, but it hadn’t yet arrived.”
“I can imagine”—Isabel giggled—“Abby and Augusta were quite worried that you would not understand their gifts.”
Setting the book aside, Harriet opened the envelope and removed from it parchment as thin as onion peel. The writing across the paper was in great swirls and elegant curves.
“It is a letter welcoming you to the estate of the widow Lady Dorthea Cruchely.”
“It took,” Emily said as Harriet skimmed the letter, “quite an investigation to find for you the best sort of haunt.
“After much consideration we decided this would be the best place to enjoy your holiday. If the spirits rumored to visit the place do not make an appearance, at least you will have a chance to enjoy the countryside. I personally made certain those individuals also partaking in Lady Cruchely’s peculiar brand of entertainment would be as respectable as yourself.”
“Thank you very much.” Harriet smiled politely.
“You’ve no idea what we’re talking about, do you?” Emily asked.
“You’re sending me away?”
The corner of Emily’s normally straight mouth twitched again. She signaled the server for more drinks before speaking. “Dorthea Cruchely allows visitors to her estate on a semi-annual basis. It is more than rumored that those permitted to be present to see them are engaged in the company of specters, spirits, and the like. At, of course, a minimal fee.”
Isabel smiled politely as the server took away their empty glasses and cups before leaning in close to whisper, “The estate is said to be the most haunted in all of England. Apparently many souls have yet to be laid to rest about the manor.”
“The gift is from all of us, Harriet,” Emily said. “Even Isabel contributed.”
“In truth,” Isabel admitted gravely, “I’ve always worried about your interest in those awful tales of murder and mayhem and spirits from beyond the grave.” She brightened. “But that is only my opinion.”
“Well, that means a lot.” Harriet was forced to press her lips together to keep from laughing out loud. “So this explains the valise and journal.”
“We did not think you had a bag and it was Augusta’s idea that you might like to record your adventures on paper.”
Harriet looked from her friends to the paper still open in her lap and felt her heart flutter strangely in her chest. How different her life would have been if she had never met the other owners of the Precious Volumes Book Shoppe. Her voice was uncharacteristically solemn as she said, “This is the nicest gift anyone has ever given me.”
“Then it is fitting,” Emily said, “because you are one of the nicest women I’ve ever known.” She did not smile as she reached for her cup.
Harriet, who once held in her possession a naked statuette of a woman and riffled through men’s undergarments without hesitation, flushed bright pink at the compliment.
“Benedict!”
It had been a long time since he’d heard his name shouted in such a manner. On the occasions before, it had most often been to call him in for dinner or to enlist his support in extracting the children from some sort of mischief their mother could not handle. Though that had been more than ten years before, he knew as he paused stepping into the carriage it was Wilhemina Ferguson calling to him.
He peered down the lane and saw her running, a large basket bouncing against her middle and one of her youngest grandchildren clinging to the back of her skirts. Whereas the aged woman had sweat-dampened features, the tot wore some sort of chocolate ooze down her chin and across her cheeks.
“I was afraid”—Wilhemina came to a breathless stop—“I would not make it in time.”
“Is something wrong?” Benedict stepped down from the carriage steps.
“No. I only wanted to bring you a few provisions for your journey.”
Provisions, Benedict knew, to the Ferguson family included great amounts of sugar and spices and other delicacies reserved for special occasions. It was perhaps one of the reasons he could chase down a thief in the time it had taken Garfield to run less than a dozen steps and have to stop, gripping his knees and wheezing.
“I had some.” The child had released her grandmother’s skirts, leaving behind brown handprints that matched the smudges on her dress.
“I didn’t know you were leaving town until this morning,” Wilhemina continued, “so I didn’t have much time to bake. There’s a meat pie or two, some fruit, and chocolate scones.”
“I had some of those!” The child beamed, exposing teeth and tongue coated in a thick layer of goop.
“I can see that, Phoebe,” Benedict said.
“Phoebe”—Wilhemina pointed to a hedge in front of Benedict’s town house—“is that a particularly green and slimy frog over there?”
The girl’s blue eyes went wide with joy and she dashed over to the shrubbery, dropping to her knees with as little concern for decorum as she had for keeping tidy.
“Now, then.” Wilhemina lowered her voice, pressing the basket into Benedict’s hands. “Are you certain this is what you must do?”
Benedict nearly dropped the basket, not expecting it to weigh almost as much as the woman who had carried it from her home to his. “I have nothing else,” he said.
She looked at him, thin pink lips pursed. “I worry about you going alone. What if you do find something that pertains to Garfield’s death?”
“Don’t worry.” He said the words he had heard Garfield say to his wife a hundred times before.
She made a face then shook her head. “Benedict, I sincerely hope you do not find anything at that estate. I hope you spend the next week or so lounging in bed until well past dawn and staying up late playing cards with a gent or two.” She reached up with a weathered hand and touched his cheek. “Garfield would want you to be happy, not spend all your free time searching for whomever took him from us.”
“This is the last link I have to that bloody watch.” He spoke through his teeth, though his anger was not directed at the woman who was like a mother to him. “I cannot ignore it and let a killer get away.”
“I know,” Wilhemina whispered, and dropped her chin to stare at the ground. “I so wish you had better things than murder to occupy your mind.” She looked up at him through her lashes. “A wife perhaps, and one could always use a few little ones.”
Benedict restrained a groan. It was amazing how the woman could even now turn the conversation to marriage and family, or lack thereof.
“Grammy”—Phoebe bounded over, hands now caked in chocolate and dirt—“I couldn’t find no frog. But I did get this!” She opened a palm to proudly expose a fat, wriggling worm.
Benedict lifted a brow at Wilhemina.
“Very nice, love. He is a handsome little fellow.” She ruffled the girl’s amber curls. “What shall we name him?”
Phoebe looked at Benedict and he winced as she declared, “Benedict!”
“Good choice,” Wilhemina said.
“I have to go.” Benedict hefted the basket into the carriage and allowed Wilhemina to press a quick kiss to his cheek. “Do not worry,” he said again, and she nodded.
As the conveyance drew away, he could hear Phoebe and her grandmother talking.
“Do you think Uncle Benedict is mad I ate a scone?”
“No, Phoebe. Very little makes him mad, and he was never opposed to sharing.”
“Good.” Benedict looked out the window in time to see the girl give her worm a loud kiss. “I ate two.”
It was a hulking structure that loomed over the surrounding countryside on a shelf of land meager in comparison. The façade was brutally scarred where the great manor faced the weathered road, as if to challenge the world head-on with its haunting beauty and stark wound. Most of the stone structure was perfect, pale in color and surrounded by lush greenery and thick layers of grass. A quarter of it, however, was black with soot, as dark as the sky above, though it had no stars to dot its bleakness. One of the windows in the uppermost row that stretched across the front of the house was void of glass and light. It peered out at the oncoming carriage like a blind eye.
Harriet loved the battered manor upon first sight. She gazed at Rochester Hall steadily as their carriage, buffeted by storm winds and rain, lumbered its way up the rocky drive.
The sound was muffled so she couldn’t be certain, but could have sworn it was a moan of dismay that flittered across her ears. Harriet looked back over her shoulder at her companion and caught the woman quickly dropping a fist from her mouth. Her forced smile was almost painful to behold.
“Interesting, is it not?”
Harriet eased back into her seat. “Indeed.”
Silence stretched between them as she waited. They were coming upon the iron gates of the estate when Isabel spoke again.
“Harriet”—she removed a handkerchief from her reticule and began to polish her spectacles—“if things do not turn out as well as you expected, do send word and I shall dispatch a carriage for you right away.”
“I would rather not easily dismiss the gift my friends have given me.”
. . .
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