the water.
We slid across the current to the girl who floundered weakly in the shadow of Denis's boat, her cries growing fainter as we neared. I held the rope ready. Grenville competently turned to drift alongside Nance, just as her head went under.
I tossed away the rope, leaned hard over the side, and grabbed. Nancy's shoulder slipped from my grasp, but her hair tangled my wrist. I buried my fingers in it and hauled her upward. She came, all limp and heavy, and I got my hands under her arms and pulled her over the gunwale. Nance fell to the bottom with a wet slap, her skirt in shreds, her legs cut and bleeding.
Her eyes were closed, her skin cold and clammy. I rolled her onto her belly, and pressed hard on her ribs. I pushed and pushed, while my opium haze receded and pain ground through me.
At last, Nancy groaned and vomited up the dark water of the Thames. I pulled her into my arms, holding her, rocking her, kissing her wet face. Tears spilled from her eyes, but she clung to me, kissing me back, her lips weak.
Grenville took up the oars again and rowed us away from the conflagration and the boats zigzagging through the river, and toward the shore.
I awoke to warm sunshine, a sweet-smelling bed, and a cool hand on my brow.
'Louisa.'
I caught her hand and gripped it, tight, tight. She returned the pressure, and our eyes met, and held.
I lay in a featherbed with cool sheets over me and lavender-scented pillows under my head. My body ached all over, my face stinging with healing cuts.
'Where am I?' I croaked. 'This isn't your spare bedroom.'
Louisa smiled. 'No, it's Mr. Grenville's. He insisted you be brought here, and he sent for his own surgeon.'
Damn good of him, but I felt a twinge of worry. 'What about Nance? Where is she?'
'At my house, being fussed over by my cook and housemaid, hating every minute of it.'
My face hurt too much for smiles. 'She does not much like women.'
'So I understand from her unfortunate language. Who is she?'
I let Louisa disentangle her hand from mine. 'A street girl whose well-being I foolishly care about. Please don't cart her off to a workhouse. Or one of those horrible houses of reform.'
'Don't worry. She may stay in my attics until you decide what's to be done for her.'
'I hope you have a stout lock on your attic door.'
A smile crinkled the corners of her eyes. 'She has tried to run away twice. Until I told her you wished her to remain there. Since then, she's been curiously compliant. The things she says about you are-quite interesting.'
I grunted. 'Don't trust her.'
Louisa smiled again, then she dropped her gaze, watching her hand smooth my sheet. 'Aloysius wants to apologize to you. For something he said out on the river, I gather.'
My head began to ache. 'I am far too tired to face Aloysius.'
'A moment only, Gabriel. Please.'
I stared at her until she looked up and met my gaze. I wanted to tell her that I much preferred Aloysius's candid curses to that damned public politeness he hid behind while he hated me with his eyes. But I was not certain she'd understand. She wanted me to forgive him all his past sins, and I was not yet ready.
'Tell your husband and his apology to go to hell,' I said.
Her eyes filled with tears. We eyed one another for a few heartbeats of silence before she turned and rustled across the cavernous room and out the door. She did not say good-bye.
My fogged brain still swam with the aftereffects of opium, and whatever else Grenville's surgeon had given me for pain. I remembered the conclusions I'd formed while on board the boat, and I groped for them through the haze of my thoughts. I was missing one piece of information about Horne's death-the identity of one person-but I knew now what that person had done.
As much as I tried to think it through, my eyes closed, and when I awoke again, the shadows slanted sharply on the huge carpet.
Grenville's spare bedchamber must have been about thirty feet across and as much high. The canopied bed I lay in could have held five people, and the cost of the damask hangings could have bought them all food for a year. I felt like an insect waiting to be stepped on.
I rubbed the blur from my eyes as Grenville himself tramped into the room. He was dressed in a costly suit and a pristine cravat, but he wore soft, flat shoes and no jewels in his lapels, so I assumed he was spending the evening at home.
When he saw that I was awake, he pulled an armchair next to the bed and plopped down on it, resting his elbows on his knees.
'Where did you learn to row like that?' I asked.
'Quebec. And the Nile. I'll tell you all about it someday. I never thought I'd have adventures in staid and boring London, but that was before I met you.'
'Grenville, about that letter I sent you-' My face warmed, remembering the haughty phrases I'd used.
Grenville held up his hand. 'Say nothing of it. I had no right to be such a highhanded prig, and I deserved everything you said. Well, most of it. I might have to box you over one or two things. But it's a mercy you told me to go to Mrs. Brandon's supper party. When my servants came home without you, I worried a bit, but when I received your letter next morning, I understood you were simply annoyed with me. When I called on you in person, and you weren't home, I still supposed you avoiding me. But when I told Mrs. Brandon of your absence, she became alarmed at once.' He shuddered. 'Damn it, Lacey, Denis might have killed you and we still wouldn't know.'
'He didn't mean to kill me.'
'No? Those pistol shots came damned close for someone who had no intention of killing you.'
I shook my head against the pillow. 'If Denis had wanted me dead, he'd have had me killed at once. He could have done so at any time, easily, and you'd still be wondering where I'd got to. No, he meant to frighten me away from crusading against him. He wanted me to escape, and probably watched to see how I'd do it. The shots were made by his hired men, who were understandably annoyed at me for setting the boat on fire.'
'Perhaps.' He looked skeptical.
'How did you know where to find me, anyway?'
Grenville's dark eyes lit, as though he'd been eagerly awaiting the opportunity to tell me his part in the adventure. 'As I said, Mrs. Brandon grew alarmed when I said I hadn't been able to find you. So I told Brandon-and his wife, because she refused to leave the room-about Denis and my fears.'
Grenville paused to smile. 'Your Mrs. Brandon must be one of the Furies. As soon as she heard my tale, nothing would do but that we went out at once and searched for you. She was prepared to come with us to the end. Nothing her husband said could persuade her otherwise, even when he shouted at her to obey.'
I could picture the scene exactly. 'Louisa is the most stubborn woman I know.'
'I pointed out that Mrs. Danbury had arrived and needed looking after, and that seemed to persuade her. But looking into Mrs. Brandon's eyes, I knew how the Spartans felt. We'd better bring you back alive, or not come back at all.'
'Mrs. Danbury?' I remembered the elegant blond woman I'd met at the viewing of the painting. 'Dear God, she didn't see me, did she?'
'No. I brought you directly here and sent word to Mrs. Brandon.'
'Thank you for that.'
Grenville lounged back in the chair. 'Do you want to know how I found you?'
He seemed anxious to impart the rest of the tale. I nodded, not really caring.
'I started searching for you around Grimpen Lane and Covent Garden. One of my footmen found your walking stick-in pieces-behind the opera house. In pieces. The scabbard was broken, but I'm having another made for you.'
'Good of you.'
'Not at all. The trail was easy to follow after that. Large men in a scuffle leave overturned rubbish and annoy people, and that is remembered. Someone saw them carry you into a carriage and head toward the river. I