‘Really, Sophie,’ scolded her mother, ‘I don’t like to hear you describing yourself as pretty. It is unbecoming for a young lady to flatter herself.’

  ‘Well, I did,’ said Sophie unrepentantly, ‘for there would have been no point in flushing unattractively.’ Then, turning back to Cicely, she said, ‘I fluttered my eyelashes and simpered and flirted, and through it all I squeezed out an incoherent apology.

  ‘He raised his hat and smiled indulgently, and said, "No harm done," and I said he must let me make amends. And then I invited him to dinner. He looked as though he were going to refuse - my heart was in my mouth! - but then he caught sight of mother. He could see she didn’t half like the idea, for she couldn’t disguise her true feelings, however much she tried, and as soon as she bridled I knew he would come. Annoying people is one of his greatest pleasures!’

  ‘Really, Sophie, you don’t know that,’ reproved her mother.

  ‘Well, by the look on his face it seemed that way,’ said Sophie. ‘And then he said, ‘"If you are sure I would be welcome," in just such a way that mother couldn’t possibly refuse, so she issued him a stiff invitation.’

  ‘And he accepted?’ asked Cicely.

  ‘He did - although as much to spite mother as to spend the evening with me, I am sure!’

  Cicely smiled. She could just imagine Martin Goss enjoying the situation, and exploiting it to the full.

  ‘So he is coming!’ said Sophie. ‘Now all we have to do is make sure he steals the tiara and we have him.’

  ‘One plan has already failed,’ Cicely reminded her, not wanting her to get her hopes up too much.

  ‘True,’ said Sophie. Then added mischievously, ‘But you didn’t have me to help you then!’

  Cicely laughed.

  Mrs Lessing, however, was not amused, wondering aloud how her daughter had grown into such a minx.

  Nevertheless, it was a buoyant party who sat down to tea. The first part of the venture had succeeded. Now they must hope for similar success in the second.

  Cicely regarded herself in the glass. Swathed in an old black mourning dress of her aunt’s, she gave the impression of being an elderly dowager instead of a young lady. Her dark hair was hidden by a wide brimmed black hat and her face was covered with a thick veil. All in all, she was pleased with her disguise. Now all she needed to do was put on her coat when the time came for her to leave the villa and she would be ready to go.

  She glanced at the clock. It was only half past nine. It was still too soon for her to set out.

  It had been agreed that Sophie would swoon at half-past ten, and Cicely meant to be in place just before then. From her vantage point in the doorway she would be able to see everything that happened, and go to Sophie’s aid if the situation should turn unexpectedly ugly.

  Alex, too, would be there, hidden across the road from Cicely, ready to lend his assistance if it should be required. But if all went well then neither he nor Cicely would need to take a hand. Mr Goss would take the tiara and head for his fence, where the two private detectives would apprehend him in the act of trying to sell it.

  Cicely went over to the window and looked out at the night. To her relief it was fine and clear. Rain would have spoilt their plan completely - Sophie could hardly have suggested a walk if it had been pouring down! But fortune had favoured them, and soon she would be on her way.

  Cicely tried to read, but she could not keep her attention on the novel, no matter how entertaining, because she was engaged in a far more entertaining enterprise of her own.

  At last it was time to go. Slipping into one of her aunt’s coats she lowered her veil then left the villa, setting out on foot for the Kurhaus.

  Half an hour later, she was safely ensconced in the doorway, waiting for Sophie to appear.

  The time passed slowly. She was cramped in the confines of the doorway but dare not leave it in case Sophie and Mr Goss, coming out of the Kurhaus, should see her. She stamped her feet and blew into her hands to ward off the cold.

  Five minutes passed, then ten, and Cicely began to grow anxious. Sophie should have made an appearance by now. Try as she might, Cicely could not prevent herself from imagining the various things that could have gone wrong. The Honourable Martin Goss might have failed to appear at the dinner party; he might have been impervious to Sophie’s charms; or he might have seen a piece of jewellery that was more to his thief’s liking and decided to ignore the tiara.

  The latter was a problem Cicely had always known they would face. Her aunt’s guests were wealthy people, and the ladies would inevitably be wearing their jewels. If Goss saw something he felt would make a better target for his light fingers -

  But wait. What was that? The sound of a woman’s voice? It was Sophie’s laughter, borne to her on the wind.

  Hastily she pressed herself back into the doorway. By angling herself in exactly the right position she was able to see what was happening without being seen.

  Yes. Sophie had managed to get Martin Goss to escort her outside. The two of them were approaching the place where Sophie had arranged to swoon. Sophie was looking beautiful in an off-the-shoulder evening gown. It was no surprise that Mr Goss, resplendent in evening dress, should have been delighted with the idea of escorting her outside, even had she not been wearing a magnificent tiara.

  But the tiara was there, glinting in the moon-and-starlight. Cicely held her breath. They reached the spot where Sophie intended to swoon - and now Sophie was swooning, and the tiara, just as they had practised it, was slipping from her head. Their plan was working.

  Even so, Cicely was anxious as Mr Goss helped Sophie to the bench, where she gracefully sank down in an attitude of complete helplessness. He evidently said a few words to her - he is promising to fetch her mother, thought Cicely with satisfaction - and then Sophie fell back again in a most convincing fashion, whilst Goss left her side.

  Cicely watched him head back towards the Kurhaus. She was on tenterhooks, wondering whether he would take the tiara. She hardly dare look as she saw him approach it. He stopped, looked back to make sure that Sophie was indeed unconscious - or at least appeared to be so - then, with a furtive look round, he bent and picked up the tiara, which he slipped into his pocket.

  Cicely let out her breath. So far so good.

  She continued to watch as he hurried on, past the Kurhaus and up the street that led to his contact. She felt a surge of jubilation rising inside of her. They had done it!

  A minute later she sobered. There were still a number of things that could go wrong. Martin Goss might have a different contact in Marienbad, one they knew nothing about. Or he might decide to go to Karlsbad, or another of the neighbouring towns, to get rid of the tiara.

  Sophie, still in character, was draped beautifully across the bench in case Goss should return. Cicely could not help admiring her style. Lillie Langtry, who had been the darling of Edward VII before she had become a notable actress, could not have done it better!

  Even so, the next fifteen minutes were tense. Cicely longed to leave the doorway and stretch her legs, but she dare not move. If anything went wrong and Goss returned she did not want to rouse his suspicions. So she must wait until Alex, who was to discreetly follow Goss to his contact, returned to tell her that it had all gone according to plan.

  The minutes ticked by. She saw Sophie stir once or twice before sitting up, though in a pose which still suggested a recent swoon. If all went well, Goss would not return. But until they were sure he had been apprehended Sophie must continue to play her part.

  The church clock chimed eleven. Surely it would not be much longer?

  But no! There was Alex, hurrying towards her along the empty street.

  ‘We’ve got him!’ he exclaimed as he joined her in the doorway.

  ‘At last!’ Cicely was delighted.

  She lifted her veil, which was beginning to stifle her, and threw it back over her hat. It caught on the hat pin. She raised her hands to free it, only to find them bru
shing Alex’s strong fingers, as he too moved to release her veil. She stilled, her mouth a round ‘o’ as she looked up into his face.

  His expression was penetrating. He was looking down at her with the light of passion burning in his eyes. She felt his fingers close round her hands. Then he drew them to his lips. A tingling sensation spread over her skin, despite her gloves: the electricity that coursed through her whenever he touched her could not be stopped by mere lace. He turned her hands over and kissed her palms. She shuddered, the power of his touch sending waves of desire through her.

  ‘Well? Did we get him?’

  Sophie’s voice broke into their private moment, and Cicely quickly withdrew her hands, so that by the time Sophie reached them there was nothing untoward for her to see. Fortunately, Alex’s back had blocked her view of what had just happened, for innocent though the gesture had been in one way, in another it had been full of forbidden passion.

  ‘Yes.’ Alex replied to Sophie’s question. ‘He went to see his contact, as we hoped he would, and was in the process of negotiating a price for the tiara when the two private detectives I’d hired took him in charge.’

  ‘Do we have him? Really have him?’ asked Cicely. ‘Will the police be able to make the charges stick?’

  Alex nodded. ‘They will have sworn statements from us saying what took place here tonight - leaving out the part about it being a trap, of course - and the testimony of the private detectives. The Honourable Martin Goss will be going away for a very long time.’

  ‘Hooray!’ said Sophie. ‘Then I had better be getting back to the dinner party. It will be finishing soon. All of Mother’s guests are at the spa for the good of their health, and the evening will end at an early hour. Wait for us in an inconspicuous corner of the Kurhaus. I know Mother wants to invite you back to the villa for coffee,’ she said to Alex. ‘She wants to hear all about it.’

  Cicely and Alex escorted Sophie back to the Kurhaus, where the dinner party was already breaking up. They stayed in the background whilst Sophie and her mother said goodbye to all their guests, and then the four of them returned to the villa, where they set about talking over the night’s events over a cup of coffee.

  ‘I am so relieved it all went well,’ said Mrs Lessing, who had not liked the scheme and had doubted the wisdom of going along with it, despite her agreement.

  She had been particularly anxious when Sophie had walked out of the Kurhaus with Mr Goss, and had almost called a halt to the proceedings there and then. Even the knowledge that Alex and Cicely would be keeping an eye on Sophie had not completely stilled her maternal worries. But it was over now, and successfully so. Martin Goss had been caught.

  ‘Your sister will at last be vindicated,’ said Sophie, who had heard all about Katie’s ordeal at the hands of Martin Goss.

  ‘Yes.’ A look of satisfaction crossed his face. ‘She is no longer in service, so in one way it no longer matters, but she will still be delighted to know that no one will now believe she stole that wretched bracelet.’

  ‘And Gladys, too, will be vindicated,’ said Cicely. ‘I will make sure that news of Goss’s arrest reaches everyone who attended the ball at Oakleigh Manor, so that no one will be left with any suspicions about her honesty.’

  ‘A very satisfying evening,’ said Mrs Lessing, relaxing now that it had come to a close.

  The servants came in to remove the tray and Alex rose.

  ‘Very satisfying,’ he agreed. ‘But now, it’s late. I must be getting back to Karlsbad.’

  ‘Must you go so soon?’ asked Sophie.

  He gave her a tolerant smile. ‘It is almost two o’clock. Good night,’ he said to Mrs Lessing. He turned to Cicely. His eyes lingered on hers. ‘Good night,’ he said softly.

  ‘Good night,’ she returned.

  And then he was gone.

  Alone in her room some half an hour later, Cicely began to tidy away her things. She had dropped her aunt’s black coat and hat on the bed when she had returned from the Kurhaus and, as the maid had not been into her room since then, she knew she must put them away before she could settle down to sleep. She arranged her aunt’s coat over the back of the chair that stood in front of the dressing table and then picked up the matching hat.

  She remembered the moment when he veil had caught on her hat pin outside the Kurhaus and the way in which Alex’s hand had brushed hers as they had both tried to free it. The memory of it was so strong that she could almost feel the touch of his fingers even now.

  She longed for things to be different; for Alex to believe in her as she believed in him; and Eugenie to be nothing to him. But it would not be wise to encourage such wishful thinking.

  She brought her thoughts back to the present and carried the hat over to the wardrobe - and then stopped suddenly, her heart pounding in her chest. For there, in the corner, almost hidden by the shadows next to the wardrobe, was a dark figure, unfolding itself from its hiding place. She stood still, frozen, and then backed away, even as her eyes widened in fear. For there, pushing himself out of the shadows was . . . Martin Goss.

  ‘No,’ she gasped. ‘It can’t be.’

  ‘Can’t be what?’ he asked menacingly, stepping forward into the candlelight.

  His appearance was immaculate. His double-breasted jacket with its long tails, wing-collared shirt, tailored trousers and flat pumps, were the hallmark of a civilised gentleman. But his blue eyes held an evil gleam.

  Cicely’s eyes dropped to his hands. He was holding something between them. It was the sash from one of her evening dresses. As she watched, he stretched it between his hands, wrapping one end round each hand in a menacing manner before snapping it in the most alarming way.

  There was no doubting his purpose. He was no longer content with theft. He meant to strangle her. But how had he known she was involved? And how had he known where to find her? And how had he escaped from the detectives? She wanted to know the answers to those questions, but even more she wanted to make him talk to her so that she would have time to try and think of a way out of the terrible situation.

  ‘How did you find me?’ she asked.

  He gave a crooked smile. ‘Find you? I didn’t find you - that was just a lucky chance. I found - or wanted to find - Miss Lessing.’ His voice became hard. ‘Because the charming Miss Lessing set a trap for me.’

  ‘How . . . ’ Cicely’s voice was quavering. ‘How did you know?’ she asked, wondering where their plan had gone wrong.

  ‘As soon as the detectives revealed themselves I knew I’d been had, and it didn’t take me long to work out who’d had me. The oh-so-charming Miss Lessing, who just happened to bump into me on the promenade and just happened to invite me to her mother’s dinner party, before inducing me to take her outside, where she conveniently lost her tiara whilst appearing to swoon. It was a good set-up. It’s just a pity - for you - the detectives weren’t up to the job. They thought they’d got me, but once outside I gave them the slip. And then I wanted revenge.’

  ‘But how did you find the villa?’ demanded Cicely. ‘You had no way of knowing where Miss Lessing lived.’

  ‘Hadn’t I, though? I had already made it my business to find out - although I must admit, it was originally for different purposes. I’m in low water, and Miss Lessing is a pretty young heiress; moreover, a pretty young heiress who’d taken a fancy to me - or at least, that’s how it seemed when she bumped into me on the promenade. I thought she was the answer to my prayers.

  ‘So as soon as I’d accepted her invitation to the dinner party I made it my business to discover where she lived. In fact, I found out all about her. Where she went, what she did, what she liked and disliked, and - oh, yes - what kind of dowry she was likely to have.’

  ‘So you intended to marry her,’ said Cicely, realizing that this was why Goss had made so many enquiries.