Page 33 of The Garden Intrigue


  “Huh?” I said. Someone was talking to me.

  I looked around and saw various expressions of horror and disbelief. Cate was stifling a nervous giggle behind one hand. Jeremy looked miffed, but, then, Jeremy generally looked miffed where I was involved.

  Oh. It was Micah Stone. And he wasn’t used to being ignored.

  Of course, of the lot of them, the one person who didn’t seem to mind my not paying attention to Micah Stone was Micah Stone.

  “Sorry!” I said brightly. “I was thinking about something else.”

  “Eloise,” said Jeremy, “is an academic. Her mind is often elsewhere.”

  “Yeah?” said Micah Stone. “What do you study?”

  “English history,” I said. I made a gesture that encompassed the hallway down which we were walking. “This.”

  “Eloise,” said Jeremy again, “is only here for a short time.”

  For some reason I couldn’t quite explain, the hairs on the back of my neck prickled. I know it’s a cliché, but clichés exist for a reason. Sometimes they’re true.

  “I’m here on a fellowship,” I explained to Stone. A fellowship that was about to run out.

  “I imagine you’ll miss all this,” Jeremy said meaningfully. “When you go back to America.”

  “That’s not for some time yet,” piped up Serena, the first thing she had said. I felt a surge of gratitude towards her. “Isn’t it?”

  I could feel Colin looking at me. I didn’t know what to say. “Um.…The lease on my flat runs out pretty soon,” I admitted. “I need to do something about that. Anyway. This is the first time I’ve ever seen a film crew!”

  As a diversion, it didn’t do much to divert.

  “When?” asked Colin.

  “June. June 1.” Only two weeks away. I scratched at a suddenly itchy patch on my arm. “I’m sure I can get them to let me renew. Are most on-location places like this?” I asked Stone desperately.

  “Some have worse plumbing,” he said, and we all obediently laughed. He turned to Colin, having correctly marked him out as the man of the house. “We’ll try to stay out of your hair as much as possible while we’re here.”

  Jeremy looked distinctly displeased.

  “And we’ll try to stay out of yours,” I said.

  “Thanks,” said Stone, and seemed to mean it.

  “Do you have to redo a lot of takes because of people waving at the camera?” I asked curiously. Thank goodness for the change of subject. Whatever Stone’s next movie, even if it was kung fu meets Marlowe with rappers, I was going to watch it. At the theatre. For full price.

  “You don’t even want to know,” said Stone.

  “Will be you be able to stay that long?” Jeremy broke in.

  Both Stone and I looked at him.

  “Being in the movie, I kind of have to be here,” said Stone, as to a slow child. I could see Colin’s lips twitch. Phew. A few more digs at Jeremy, and Colin might even be reconciled to the presence of the film crew. I could have hugged Micah Stone. That is, if I hadn’t thought that would make Colin become unreconciled.

  “I meant Eloise,” Jeremy said, his voice smooth, so smooth that one almost missed the ratty edge underneath. “I hear congratulations are due. On your teaching position.”

  “Teaching position?” said Colin.

  “At Harvard,” I said distractedly. How in the hell had Jeremy known? “I’ve been offered the head teaching fellow slot for 10B. Modern Europe. I haven’t said yes,” I added quickly.

  “Or no?” said Jeremy. In his black turtleneck and dark gray sport coat, he reminded me of a modern update of a medieval woodcut of a demon taunting some hapless soul. He had that same sort of smug look about the mouth. If he had a pitchfork, he would have been poking me with it.

  “You’re the one,” I said. “You’re the one who’s been going through my notes.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Jeremy, just as Dempster had, but whereas Dempster had been genuinely confused, Jeremy seemed just a little too pleased with himself.

  Micah Stone moved slightly sideways, disassociating himself from the lot of us.

  “Yes, you do,” I said with confidence. There was a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. I didn’t want to look at Colin, not now that he knew I had been lying to him—well, if not lying, then not being totally forthcoming. “You went through my notes. You read my e-mail. Why?”

  Jeremy said nothing. He just kept smiling.

  “Christ,” said Colin, and we all looked at him, even Micah Stone. Colin was staring straight at Jeremy, disbelief and disgust writ large across his face. “You’re still looking for it, aren’t you?”

  Whatever it was, Serena knew what they were talking about. She edged out from under Jeremy’s arm. Cate raised both eyebrows at me over her clipboard. I shook my head. I had no idea.

  “It?” I ventured, not quite touching Colin’s arm.

  Colin looked down at me, and I felt my breath release in a silent sigh of relief. Whatever else, his disgust wasn’t for me. I put my hand on his arm and his hand closed over it, warm and solid.

  “Why don’t you tell her, Jeremy,” he said. “Since you find the topic so absorbing.”

  Jeremy wasn’t having any of it. For the moment, he seemed to have forgotten the imperative to suck up to Micah Stone. He folded his arms across his chest. “It’s as much mine as it is yours.”

  “If it existed,” countered Colin. “Which it doesn’t.”

  “It?” I repeated.

  “Don’t look at me,” said Micah Stone.

  “Why else would you bring her here?” Jeremy nodded at me. “I know what you’re after.”

  “Oh, do you?” What went on between us in our bedroom was strictly between me and Colin.

  Jeremy dismissed me with a glance. “The old woman’s in on it, too.”

  “That ‘old woman’ is your grandmother,” Colin said tensely. “The woman who raised you. You might show a little respect.”

  “This is all very entertaining,” said Stone, “but we have food getting cold. Anyone want to tell me what’s going on?”

  Colin looked at Jeremy. Jeremy looked at Colin. Serena looked at her shoes. They were very cute shoes—Manolos, unless I missed my guess—but, still.

  I sighed. “He,” I said, pointing at Jeremy, “has been going through my notes and my e-mail, looking for something.”

  “For the plans,” said Colin.

  For a weird moment, past and present collided.

  “The plans for the submarine?” I blurted out.

  “Er, no,” said Colin, giving me a weird look. “The plans to the house.”

  “O-kay,” said Stone.

  “Not just any plans,” said Jeremy. “The plans. Why else would you bring in a historian, but to find them? I know what you’re after.”

  “I’m after dinner,” said Micah Stone pleasantly. “Anyone else coming?”

  “I am!” said Cate, waving her clipboard. “And I have the seating chart.”

  “You just want it for yourself,” Jeremy sneered. “That’s what this is all about.”

  “For the last time,” said Colin, his voice cracking with frustration. “It. Doesn’t. Exist.”

  I couldn’t take it anymore. I stepped between the two men. “What doesn’t exist?” I demanded.

  They were too busy glaring at each other to answer me. Serena’s voice piped up, unnaturally high in the sudden silence.

  “The lost treasure of Berar.”

  Chapter 29

  Betrayed, betrayed, and all dismayed,

  Filled now with fears not soon allayed,

  For treachery at last will out,

  And with it pain and hurt and doubt.

  —Emma Delagardie and Augustus Whittlesby,

  Americanus: A Masque in Three Parts

  But aren’t these… ?”

  Emma’s brow wrinkled as she drew out the papers from beneath the coverlet. She didn’t recognize the specific mechanism,
but she knew Mr. Fulton’s distinctive hand. Her muddled brain was slow to make sense of what she was seeing. It wasn’t the sketch for the wind machine, and it certainly wasn’t the steamship, but it was quite decidedly Mr. Fulton’s.

  What were Mr. Fulton’s plans doing in Augustus’s bed?

  If they were back at Mme. Campan’s, she would assume it was someone’s version of a practical joke. Not that Augustus would have been at Mme. Campan’s, being male, or that they would have been in this position.

  “How bizarre!” she said, and looked up at Augustus. “These are Mr. Fulton’s. I wonder how they got—?”

  “Emma,” Augustus said.

  He wasn’t smiling. He wasn’t perplexed. Instead, there was a grim determination on his face that Emma had never seen there before. It made him look like a different person. Like a stranger, wearing Augustus’s face.

  Emma drew back, holding the plans to her chest.

  “What is it?” she asked. “Why are you looking like that? It’s just someone’s joke, I’m sure.”

  He levered himself up into a sitting position, with a brusque, abrupt motion. “It’s not a joke.” There was a note of grim finality in his voice entirely at odds with the situation. “Emma—”

  “Yes?” It was still stifling hot in the room, but Emma felt cold, cold and alarmed without being quite sure why. She looked up at him hopefully, far too conscious of her own disarray, of the sudden removal from intimacy to distance. “Whatever it is, surely it can’t be all that bad.”

  “Mmph,” said Augustus enigmatically.

  Emma heard paper crinkle and realized she was crushing Mr. Fulton’s plans between her fingers.

  “You’re beginning to scare me,” she said, only half jokingly.

  “What I have to tell you,” Augustus said, “places the power of life or death in your hands. Not only my life,” he added, “but those of others as well.”

  The words ought to have sounded melodramatic. They didn’t. He spoke them in a simple, matter-of-fact tone that sent a chill down Emma’s spine.

  Pressing her lips together, she nodded to show that she understood, even though she didn’t understand, not one bit.

  Augustus looked at the documents in Emma’s lap. “Those papers didn’t get there by accident. I put them there.”

  “But why?” she asked.

  Augustus took a deep breath and lifted his eyes to hers. “Because I am—and have been for some time—an agent for the English government.”

  “An agent,” Emma repeated. Her mind scrabbled uselessly with the word. She had an agent. He managed her property for her. Somehow, she didn’t think that was the sort of agent to which Augustus referred, not given the way he was looking at her, as though he had just dragged his guts out to be pecked by particularly vicious vultures. Not just an agent. An agent for the English government. Under ordinary circumstances, that might mean any number of things. But not now, not in a time of war, with all official diplomatic and commercial communication between the two countries forbidden. “You mean a spy?”

  “I prefer master of inquiries,” said Augustus.

  Emma gaped at him. There he sat, his long hair curling around his face, the neck of his shirt untied where she had untied it, looking so normal, so familiar, and yet so ineffably different. It was something in his expression that had changed, something in the way he held himself.

  “You’re not—this is not—” Emma floundered. “You mean it.”

  “Every word,” he said.

  “But—” How could that be? He was a fixture of the Parisian scene. He had been here a good ten years or more. Did that mean for ten years, he—Emma’s mind shied away from the thought. “Then, your poetry…”

  “A front,” he said quietly. “And a code.”

  Through a glass, darkly, she could remember standing with him in Bonaparte’s new gallery in the Louvre Palace. She could hear her own voice, in echo, saying, It’s all an act, isn’t it? You’re much more sensible than you sound. He had been taken aback, but only for a moment, before he had answered, oh so glibly, that patrons prefer their poets poetical. And she had believed him.

  “That’s why you sound one way in public and another in private. It’s not just because your patrons expect a poet to sound poetical.”

  He bowed his head in acknowledgment.

  “When I realized that you weren’t what you claimed to be, weren’t you afraid I might find you out?”

  Augustus studied her face for a moment. “No,” he said gently.

  The word hit Emma like a slap across the face.

  “No?” she echoed, knowing that in it was encapsulated a worse insult than she could immediately comprehend. She forced out a laugh. “No, of course not. Why would I? Not silly Madame Delagardie? You must have thought me such a fool.”

  “I don’t think you a fool.”

  Didn’t he? Emma pressed back against the wall, the thin pillow bunched against her back. He had known she would never figure it out on her own. And she hadn’t. She wouldn’t have. Not even now. He might have given her a ridiculous story about the plans—no idea how they got there, part of a prank, insulation for the cold nights—she would have believed any of it, just as she had believed him before. Emma wrapped her arms around herself to stop herself from shaking.

  “Why are you telling me this now?” she asked shrilly.

  “Because we promised each other honesty,” Augustus said simply.

  Honesty? Emma stared at him, at his familiar-strange face, at the deep brown eyes regarding her so steadily and so sadly, and felt a burning rage boil up inside her. He had lied to her. He had lied to her about everything and he dared to speak to her about honesty?

  Nothing, nothing at all was as she had thought it to be. Her life, her life as she had known and experienced it, wasn’t what she had believed it to be. It was all upside down and inside out and all because this man, this treacherous, lying, treacherous—she had already used “treacherous,” hadn’t she? It didn’t matter. The outcome was the same, whatever she called it. She had been deliberately deceived, deceived and misled.

  Seen through this new lens, seemingly innocuous events took on a sinister hue. She remembered Augustus, uninvited, offering his services with the masque. Augustus, again uninvited, invading her salon. Augustus, always attentive, always solicitous, hinting that their best work would be done if he was to accompany her to this salon or that party.

  “You were the one who sought me out about the masque,” she said, her voice shaking. “Not the other way around. You were the one who insisted we needed to work together. Why?”

  He didn’t even try to deny it. “I had been told that Bonaparte had a new weapon he was testing. Here. This weekend.”

  “I see,” said Emma, and for the first time she finally did. “You needed me to get to Malmaison.”

  Augustus nodded.

  Emma’s voice went up. “All of this”—the weeks of work, the cozy téte-à-tétes in her study, his supposed concern for her health and well-being—“you did all of this for an invitation to Malmaison.”

  “Not all,” said Augustus, and his voice was so low she could hardly hear it.

  “You used me,” Emma said wonderingly. “You used me and I didn’t even know it.” It would be amusing if it weren’t so awful, so awful and so painful. She lifted her chin and said, conversationally, “You’re much better at it than Georges.”

  Augustus flinched. “It’s not like that, Emma. I promise—”

  “Don’t.” Her voice crackled through the room, surprising them both. Emma pressed her hands together, so hard she could feel her knuckles crack. “Don’t promise me anything. I don’t want promises. Not from you.”

  Augustus leaned forward. “You have every right to be angry. But at least hear me out. There were reasons—”

  She held up a hand to forestall him, her mind working furiously. “You wanted Mr. Fulton’s plans. You knew they would be in the summerhouse. That’s why you wanted to talk to me tod
ay, wasn’t it? Not because you were worried I might be marrying Kort. You just needed me to get to the summerhouse.”

  The guilt on his face was all the answer she needed.

  Emma felt tears stinging her eyes and blinked them fiercely away. She wouldn’t cry for him. He wasn’t worth crying for.

  “I’m right, aren’t I?”

  “That was part of the reason.” There were lines on Augustus’s face that hadn’t been there before. “I shouldn’t have involved you. I know that. At the beginning, yes. That was different. But now, once I—” He broke off, seemingly at a loss. “I shouldn’t have done it. It wasn’t fair to you. It wasn’t fair to us.”

  Us? What us? There was no us. “I wouldn’t have wanted our friendship to get in the way of your plans,” said Emma politely.

  “It’s not—” Augustus pressed his palms against his eyes. She had him on the defensive now. Shouldn’t that make her feel better? There was a lump in Emma’s throat that wouldn’t go away when she swallowed. Augustus drew in a deep breath. “Today at the summerhouse, you had me turned so topsy-turvy that I completely forgot why I was meant to be there. I forgot the plans. I forgot everything but you.”

  Emma drew her legs up under her. “How very inconvenient for you.”

  “I didn’t want to deceive you,” he said. “Trust me that far, at least. There were things I couldn’t tell you, things I wasn’t allowed to tell you. But everything else—everything we’ve done together, everything I’ve said to you—Emma, that much is real.”

  “Everything we’ve done together?” Emma hugged her knees. “You mean when you were pretending to be a poet in need of employment? When you were lying to me about your motives? When you were using me to get into Malmaison?”

  “It’s not like that,” Augustus said. He dashed his hair out of his eyes. “I mean, it was like that. In the beginning. But not since I’ve got to know you. Not since you’ve come to mean so much to me.”