So much for his unease over forcing Mrs. St. Vincent to sell. She apparently had no compunction about using him for profit. Still, hadn’t she made it clear from the start that it would be all-out war?

Sex aside-or maybe not. Perhaps sex was just a skirmish of another kind. Whatever it was, he had no intention of relinquishing the field of battle until it was tactically useful. In other words, when he’d had his fill of the lovely Mrs. St. Vincent.

THE BARRISTER WAS all smiles when Fitz walked into his office.

“Good morning, Your Grace. I have excellent news.”

“Then we both do,” Fitz replied. “Your men apparently found something.”

“Indeed. Mrs. St. Vincent was out last evening,” Hutchinson explained as Fitz took a seat across from him, “so my men took the opportunity to search her apartment and discovered rather a lot.” He smiled broadly. “Enough to justify a raid, Your Grace. More than enough.”

Fitz didn’t mention he’d been with Rosalind. “Perfect,” he said instead, brushing aside the slight prick of conscience that persisted despite his displeasure over her writing. “Should Mrs. St. Vincent be jailed in the course of this raid, see that she is immediately released,” he said, the state of England’s jails being what they were. “There’s no need to have her traumatized.”

It might be a little late for that once she’s dragged off to jail, thought Hutchinson, but ever the circumspect retainer, he politely said, “I’ll attend to it, Your Grace.”

“Tell me now,” Fitz said, postponing his disclosure until hearing Hutchinson’s account. “What exactly did your men find? ”

“First, it seems Mrs. St. Vincent sells erotica from a small back room in her shop. Such sales are relatively common, so courts may not take issue, but such sales do come within the purview of Britain’s obscenity statutes. Of more significance, however, were the several manuscripts found in an armoire and the partially finished manuscript discovered in a desk drawer. There’s no question about the erotic content of these stories.”

“A partial manuscript? Did it have a title? ”

“Something about harems, I believe. It was in a different script than the manuscripts in the armoire.” Hutchinson pursed his lips for a moment. “My men concluded it was a woman’s hand. Very likely Mrs. St. Vincent’s.”

“I expect it was.”

“You must be referring to your news.”

Fitz nodded and pulled the small periodical from his pocket. “This week’s edition of Facts and Fantasy” he said, sliding it across Hutchinson’s desk. “The cover story is an account of my first night with Mrs. St. Vincent.” His brows rose. “In considerable detail.”

Hutchinson flipped through the magazine before setting it down. “So there’s no question the lady is involved in illegal publications.”

“None.”

“Then your ninety thousand is entirely safe.”

“Entirely.” He should have felt more satisfaction. Instead, Fitz was discontent, Hutchinson’s wretched Gustave Dorй engraving of London’s teeming masses in a dark, brooding slumscape mirrored the sourness of Fitz’s mood. “I suppose since Mrs. St. Vincent appears to be the author of this unfinished manuscript, she’s in more difficulty than if only her husband’s manuscripts had come to light? ”

“Yes, of course. In the latter case, she could plead ignorance. Naturally, that is not the case with her own work. Perhaps you’d first like to apprise her of the facts,” Hutchinson offered, recognizing a hesitancy in Groveland he’d not seen before. “Let her know you know, as it were, and if she still doesn’t see the advantage of accepting your offer, then the possibility of a raid could be advanced to exert additional pressure. Unless you’ve changed your mind after, er…” He stopped, about to say after getting to know Mrs. St. Vincent better. With the lady under surveillance, Hutchinson knew not only that Rosalind had gone to the National Gallery but also that she’d left with Groveland.

“No, not with ninety thousand at stake.”

“I wanted to be sure.” Hutchinson should have known better with Groveland’s penchant for discarding lovers. “In that case, I’ll begin the process required to execute a raid, although these things take time. Any number of bureaucrats are involved, the action is exceedingly rare these days, and that in itself requires genuflection to the right parties.”

“How long? ”

“Ten days, perhaps a little more.”

Fitz nodded. “Get started.”

Hutchinson had not won his preeminent position as a barrister by overlooking details. He asked one last time, “Is there a possibility the lady’s interests could be, shall we say, reconciled? ”

“I doubt it.” Good God, I’ll have to bring Hutchinson a less dismal engraving. That one could put you off your feed. That he’d not noticed the somber print before was testament to his present mood. “On second thought,” Fitz murmured, a brooding note in his voice, “let me think about this for a short while. Not that you can’t begin the due diligence,” he added crisply.

“I understand. With the operational snail’s pace of the bureaucracies, it can’t hurt to at least begin some initial conversations.”

Fitz was relieved to hear Hutchinson speak of a snail’s pace, when timing shouldn’t have mattered one way or the other. When it wouldn’t have in the past. When, in fact, he would have simply given Hutchinson the order to proceed without further thought. “I’ll decide soon,” Fitz said. “I’ll be out of town for a day or so.”

“Very well. I’ll wait to hear from you.”

“I’d prefer that your contacts not mention any names until absolutely necessary. Is that possible? ”

“It can be arranged.” Interesting, thought Hutchinson. Groveland doesn’t want the lady exposed to scandal. At least for the moment. “I’ll tell my sources we’d like the names on the writs to remain anonymous until the papers are served.”

Fitz smiled tightly. “Thank you.” He exhaled. “That should do it then.”

“Yes, indeed.”

Fitz came to his feet. “Thank your men for their quick results.”

“I will. A pleasant journey, Your Grace.”

Fitz looked at him blankly.

“On your travels out of town, Your Grace.”

“Ah, yes. Thank you.” Fitz smiled politely. “I’ll stop by on my return.”

“I’ll have updates for you by then.”

“Excellent.” Fitz turned to go and then swung back because he wasn’t finished with Mrs. St. Vincent just yet. Business was business; sex was sex. “I have another commission. Could you find a female doctor-someone exceptionally well-qualified-and have her pay a visit to Mrs. St. Vincent? Today preferably. Don’t look at me like that. It’s all quite innocent. Just make sure she’s good.”

“If she’s a female doctor, she’s by definition good,” Hutchinson pointed out. “Otherwise she’d never have been admitted to medical school or granted a degree.”

“You’re right; I stand corrected. If you’d have her call on Mrs. St. Vincent as soon as possible, I’d appreciate it. Naturally, see that she’s well paid for her time.”

“Consider it done.” Apparently Groveland was willing to overlook Mrs. St. Vincent’s exposй for the benefits of her company. Hutchinson pulled a sheet of paper toward him, picked up a pen, and began writing.

Moments later, Fitz was standing on the pavement wondering if he should escape the city for a time. While his comment had been a spontaneous act of evasion-unnerving thought-distancing himself from Mrs. St. Vincent’s potent allure would give him the opportunity to regard her more dispassionately.

She’d gotten under his skin-alarmingly so.

Touched previously impervious nerves.

Incited a degree of sexual yearning he’d never experienced before.

Christ, just thinking of her brought him erect even with her using him for all the world to read.

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