“What gives you the right to say that?” the countess demanded.

Poppy’s heart lurched. Her aunt looked so serious, so afraid, yet so determined when she gazed around the room, her white wig slightly askew on her head.

“A Spinster,” Aunt Charlotte began in her most confident voice, “never reveals details of her private life if she can help it. You see”—she smiled knowingly—“it’s usually much more interesting than other people’s, which can lead to a fair amount of jealousy. But tonight—luckily for you—must be the exception to that rule.”

“Go on, then, sister,” said Lord Derby, who’d walked to Aunt Charlotte’s side and held her hand.

Aunt Charlotte took a deep breath. “As much as I’ve tried these past weeks—amid all the hoopla about his art—to forget Revnik ever existed, I must admit that he was one of my great loves.” She looked up at her little brother. “I met him in St. Petersburg, Archie, when I came to stay with you for a month. In fact, I met him when I was with Marianna the day she commissioned the painting. She told him she wanted it painted for you. I accompanied her on many sittings to Revnik’s studio, which is how our affair developed. But it ended abruptly, as love affairs are wont to do.”

Poppy moved next to her father and held his hand tightly.

Aunt Charlotte gave them both a sad smile. “He saw you together that night at the ball at the Winter Palace. He told me he wanted to capture that moment, when Marianna looked up at you and … love shone from her eyes. Those were his exact words.”

Papa was silent, struggling under the weight of strong emotion. Poppy squeezed his hand harder.

Aunt Charlotte perked up. “I went back to London. My life was there, and I was determined to put Revnik behind me. Marianna wrote me and told me he was almost finished painting her portrait—for you, Archie, she told me once more—but I never saw it. I assumed he’d never finished it and that it was lost to us.”

Poppy’s heart filled with more hope. “Do you have her letters, aunt?”

Aunt Charlotte nodded, tears in her eyes. “I most certainly do, dear. And I’ll share them with whoever needs to see them, if it will help establish the Derby claim to the painting.”

The crowd started talking again, loudly, about who owned the painting.

Aunt Charlotte raised her hand.

“You may speak,” said another of Lord Derby’s Parliamentary friends, who nodded in her direction.

I tell people when they can speak,” asserted Countess Lieven.

“I was only adjusting my wig,” Aunt Charlotte said. “No one tells me when I may speak.”

And she glared at both Lord Derby’s Parliamentary crowd and at the countess.

Poppy was so proud of her.

“I believe my letters from Marianna are enough,” Aunt Charlotte went on, as blithely as if she hadn’t cut down Very Important People mere seconds before, “but there’s one more possibility.” She paused. “While Revnik and I were lovers, he told me something he claimed he’d told no one else: he sometimes left a message somewhere on his paintings, usually in a mirror.”

Everyone gasped. There was a small mirror in the background of the portrait.

Poppy looked at Nicholas. Was his instinct telling him the same thing hers was?

She was sure that painted mirror held an important message.

CHAPTER 46

Nicholas was intrigued. He already knew Lord Wyatt was their mole. The little figure in the background of the painting, the one exchanging documents with a Russian envoy, was his very image.

No wonder Wyatt was desperate to claim the painting on behalf of the government.

Later, Nicholas would wonder if Lord Wyatt’s grand new estates in Cornwall and Devon were bought with money he’d obtained selling secrets. He’d also be there to support Lord Derby when he found out the disturbing news that someone he admired and respected was working against England.

But right now Nicholas could only think of Poppy and her mother’s portrait. He gave Lady Charlotte his full attention.

“Revnik told me what look like shadows and reflections in the mirror are words written backward,” she explained. “But one must hold a looking glass up to the image to see what it says.”

Poppy’s strawberry lips were parted. Nicholas could see the questions in her eyes. Could Revnik have left a message? And to whom would it be addressed?

Nicholas could also see in Lord Derby’s face a desperate desire to have another chance, in any form, to connect with his long-departed wife through Revnik’s masterpiece.

“Quickly,” called the countess to a footman. “Bring us a looking glass.”

A moment later, the countess had one. She approached the painting carefully and held the looking glass to the small, painted mirror.

“A gift,” the countess read slowly, carefully, “to a devoted mother and wife, Marianna, who honors her husband Archibald with her undying devotion and love … from Revnik.”

Thank God.

Poppy looked at her father. Both of them had tears in their eyes. “It most clearly is our painting, isn’t it?” Derby said to her.

Poppy nodded her head, and this time, Captain Arrow came to her with a handkerchief and wiped her eyes for her.

Where had he come from?

Poppy couldn’t wipe her own tears because she was holding on to the painting again, as well as her father’s hand, and Nicholas was behind her, still squeezing her shoulder.

“Thank you,” she whispered to Arrow.

“My pleasure.” He smiled, and Nicholas swore half the ladies in the room sighed aloud.

“I have faith,” Arrow said very deliberately to her and Nicholas, “that I shall see you more often, Lady Poppy.”

“Oh, you will,” said Lord Harry, who was suddenly nearby. He gave Nicholas a meaningful look.

Harry was proud of him, Nicholas could tell.

“I look forward to getting to know you, too, Lady Poppy,” said Lumley, ever cheerful. “As a matter of fact, we showed up a few minutes ago to do just that. You and Nicholas were walking down the stairs with the painting, and I said to Harry, ‘She’s the one. She’s as dangerous as Drummond—but much prettier.’ ”

“Thanks.” Nicholas was ready to pummel his friend. All in fun, of course.

Poppy blushed and gifted Lumley with a lovely smile that made Nicholas’s heart beat faster.

Lord Derby cleared his throat and leveled his gaze at him. “I’m glad we have that settled, Drummond, but why is it, exactly, that you’re accompanying my daughter out the front door of the Lievens’ residence?”

Nicholas stood tall. “Because I love her, sir.”

There were gasps all around.

Lord Derby stared at him as if he were a lunatic. “I’m supposed to believe this, after you abandoned the engagement you entered into with her?”

“I wouldn’t let him marry me, Papa,” Poppy blurted out. “I refused him. I told him I would find a way out, no matter what he did. Even when he threatened to carry me to Gretna.”

There were more gasps.

Poppy moved closer to Nicholas, who put down the painting and squeezed her tight.

The girl was being entirely too brave and honest. Which, come to think of it, was probably why she always seemed to wind up in trouble. But Nicholas wouldn’t have her any other way.

“Why, Poppy,” her father asked her, “have you evaded marriage for three long years?”

She drew in a deep breath and looked at Nicholas. “Because I never met the right man, Papa. I was content—happy—to be a Spinster. I wanted to marry for love and love alone. Or not

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