he is about the political career.”
“So he wants you to keep her busy? Maybe on her back?” Bucky sputtered.
“Don’t be vulgar. She’s not like that.”
“So you’ll just make her think she has a chance of landing Lord Bancroft’s heir? That’s a bit low, isn’t it?”
“Drawing-room intrigues happen all the time.”
“Which makes it all perfectly fine.”
Tobias’s temper prickled. “Since when are you a moralist?”
“Someone has to put in a word for common decency.” Bucky gave a mirthless laugh. “What if I did that to your sister?”
“Imogen?” Tobias was horrified. “Why? She doesn’t have an uncle.”
Bucky rubbed his face with one hand. “Good God, there are days I’m glad to be an upstart merchant’s son. You aristos are utterly crazy.”
Tobias checked the bottle, only to find it empty. “My father just got his title a few years ago.”
Bucky uncorked another bottle. “They say there’s nothing worse than a convert. Do you even like Miss Cooper?”
“Of course I do. She’s a perfectly decent sort.” And pretty. She reminded him of a roadside briar, all the more lovely for a little wildness.
“Do you like her enough to do your father’s bidding, or too much?”
“I tried, you know. It didn’t work. All that detecting or what have you. She knew not to trust me. My heart wasn’t in it.”
“Oh.” A frown puckered Bucky’s face. “Where does that leave things?”
Tobias laughed bitterly. “The minute she walked away I wanted her.”
There was a long silence. Worry radiated from Bucky like waves of heat. “This doesn’t sound like you. Have you been getting enough sleep?”
“I know how this sounds.” Tobias set down his glass. “Don’t make too much of it. She’s just a girl.” The lie coated his tongue like something rancid.
Bucky shook his head. “Forget your father.”
“Do I have a choice? She doesn’t want me near her.”
“I doubt it’s as bad as all that. But if you keep pushing, and she keeps pushing back, you’re just going to become more invested in the game.”
“So? I need a project.”
“Before you know it, you’ll propose.”
Tobias actually thought he felt his heart stop. He buried his face in his hands, feeling the world tilt through his alcoholic haze. He imagined Evelina’s soft skin beneath his fingertips, her breath on his lips. If he proposed, would she refuse him?
The question mushroomed until it was the only thing that filled his brain.
Evelina sat in her bedroom just after dinner, hunched over the tiny writing desk. She’d received a short note from Dr. Watson that her uncle was back on the Continent after stopping in Baker Street for barely a day. The only thing he’d let slip was that her uncle was headed for Bohemia, tying up the aftermath of who-knew-what debacle. Intriguing, to be sure, but what it really meant was that she had a bit more time to find answers.
Not that she relished the thought of working alone, given her adventure in the warehouse. She still wondered what would happen when the owners noticed their dragon was missing. She might have enough magic to send it packing, but what kind of power did its masters have? What on earth had it been set to guard? How much danger had she and Imogen actually been in?
The fact that there were other magic users in the mix worried her more than she cared to
admit. She was used to having that as her secret advantage, but now she couldn’t rely on being the only one with tricks up her sleeve. Once again, she thought of the mysterious Dr. Magnus. She remained convinced that he wasn’t directly involved with the warehouse, but his fingers were in this pie somewhere.
Evelina rubbed her aching eyes and tried to focus on the papers in front of her. The window was open a crack, and Bird—wide awake now—hopped along the sill. Mouse was curled into a ball next to her inkwell, its jet nose tucked beneath its etched steel paws. The cube sat on her dresser, shrouded in the remains of Imogen’s shawl. Evelina had hidden it, along with her train case of clockworks and magical implements, at the very back of her wardrobe. But tonight she had it out, thinking it might like the fresh air and company. Beyond that, she had no idea what to do with it or what it wanted.
In the meantime, she was trying to work on the letter Grace had carried in the silk bag. She had her uncle’s pamphlet open on the desk, the letter, and a piece of notepaper in front of her. By everything she could determine, the document was written in a Vigenere cipher.
According to the pamphlet, a tabula recta was a series of alphabets staggered by one letter. There were variations, but she’d drawn the basic one.
Then she’d copied out the message letter by letter, leaving a space below each letter for the key.
Decoding was simple if one had the key, which would be a word or phrase of some kind. All she had to do was find the first letter of the key along the top of the tabula recta. Then she followed the column down until she found the first letter of the coded message, and then follow that row to the left-hand margin. Whatever letter was on that row along the left-hand margin was then the first letter of the decoded message. Then repeat with the second letter of the key to find the second letter of the message, and so on. The key would keep repeating until all the letters of the message were decoded. Dead simple, if one had the key. Which she didn’t, and it could be absolutely anything.
Evelina felt the cube reach out, touching her mind gently. The emotion in the wordless contact was as soothing as someone stroking her hair. It reminded her of Gran Cooper.
Long ago, Evelina had sat beside her fortune-telling grandmother while the old woman turned over card after card for the patrons who came to her tent wanting to know the future. The air would grow still and strangely hushed, the candlelight softer, as if the magic of the reading pulled the noise and brightness from the air. That was when little Evie would cuddle closer to her grandmother’s side, glad of the warmth of the woman’s rough woolen shawl against her cheek. The worn cards would turn,
Evelina could still remember the smell of the tent: damp earth and animals, incense and the perfume of herbs from the old woman’s medicine chest. An extra sixpence could buy the customers a love potion or a lucky charm. When Gran sold one of those, their supper might be just a little bit bigger.
At the time, the cards had been just as mysterious as the cipher, but she’d eventually learned their language: love, deceit, success, defeat. Nothing, however, could untangle the web that bound her to that tent. The threads might stretch, but nothing could cut them. She would always be Gran Cooper’s baby girl, no matter how hard Wollaston Academy tried to scrub that from her soul.
Evelina blinked the cipher back into focus again, realizing her mind had wandered.
Bird gave one of its odd mechanical chirps.
Evelina shuffled her papers into the desk drawer and slammed it shut. Bird flew out the window and perched in a nearby tree. Mouse stayed where it was, looking much like a paperweight.