housebreaker’s slim frame silhouetted against the night sky as he scrambled up the pile of fallen bricks that marked the crumbling wall at the base of the garden.
“What do ye want from me?” he screamed, pausing to grab one of the loose bricks and chuck it at Sebastian’s head.
Sebastian ducked. “I want to know who sent you.”
“Go to ’ell.”
Collecting his feet beneath him, the lad jumped. Sebastian heard his body hit the other side with a splat, then the plopping squish of running feet flailing through mud.
Sebastian climbed after him, the half-collapsed wall shifting ominously beneath him as he dropped lightly onto the far side.
He found himself in a muddy, rubbish-strewn alley hemmed in by high walls on either side. He could see the lad dashing frantically for the distant street, his feet slipping and sliding in the muck as he ran.
Sebastian pelted after him, then drew up sharply as the dark outline of a carriage loomed at the end of the alley. The near door flew open, the long, dark barrel of a rifle poking out into the night.
“Shit,” he swore, instinctively ducking his head as he dove into the shadows of the wall beside him. He hit the cold mud and said, “Shit,” again as he slid face-first through what smelled like a heap of rotting cabbage leaves mingled with a pile of fresh horse dung. Looking up, he saw a spurt of flame, heard the crack of a rifle shot cut through the night.
But the unseen man in the carriage was not shooting at Sebastian.
Some twenty feet from the end of the alley, the young housebreaker stumbled, his body jerking, his torso twisting, his knees buckling beneath him. The carriage’s driver whipped up his horses; the vehicle lurched into the night, trace chains jangling, wheels clattering over the cobbles.
Swiping at the mud and muck on his face, Sebastian went to hunker down beside the boy and draw his trembling, bloody body into his arms. “Who hired you?” Sebastian asked, lifting him.
The lad shook his head and coughed, his eyes scared, one clawlike hand digging into Sebastian’s arm.
“Tell me, damn it! Don’t you understand? Whoever they are, they just killed you.”
But the light was already fading from the boy’s eyes, the tension in his body easing, the fierce grip on Sebastian’s arm loosening, falling.
“Son of a bitch,” swore Sebastian. Heedless of the mud, he sank back on his haunches, the dead boy still gripped in his arms. “Son of a bitch,” he said again.
And then he said it a third time. “Son of a bitch.”
Hero was dressed and seated beside the fire in her bedchamber, the ancient Hebrew manuscript open on her lap, when Devlin walked in, bringing with him a pungent odor of rotten cabbage, horse manure, and mud. He’d already stripped off his coat and boots, but his face, waistcoat, and breeches were liberally smeared with muck, and he held a longhaired black cat tucked up under one arm.
The manuscript slid to the floor, forgotten, as she started at him. “Devlin. Good God. Are you all right?”
“What are you doing up?” he asked as the cat gave a disgruntled howl and leapt from his arms.
“I couldn’t sleep. What happened? And what are you doing with that cat?”
“He claims I owe him since he saved my life, although I maintain he was only returning the favor.”
She started to laugh. Then she noticed the dark red sheen mingled with the muck on his waistcoat and the laughter died on her lips. “Is that your blood?”
“Only some of it.” He headed for his dressing room, stripping off clothes as he went.
She followed him. “How much of it?”
He yanked off his ruined waistcoat, his nose wrinkling as he tossed it aside. “My apologies for the aroma. I fear I slid through someone’s garbage pile. Calhoun isn’t going to be happy. I think that waistcoat was his favorite.”
“How much of it?” she demanded again, helping him ease his ripped shirt over his head. He tried to turn away, but she saw the long purple slit that cut across his ribs and caught his arm. “Devlin—”
He squinted down at it. “It’s not deep.”
“Why didn’t you go to Gibson and get it sewn up?”
“It’s not that bad.”
“You could get lockjaw from it!”
“Sewing it up wouldn’t prevent that, now, would it?”
She gave him a look that needed no accompanying words and turned toward the bellpull. “If nothing else, you need to wash it well with hot water. I’m ringing for Calhoun.”
“Good God, no; it’s