Midsummer Moon
4/5
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About this ebook
Merlin Lambourne has invented the “speaking box”—a sort of telephone—which is so valuable that Napoleon has killed for it. Sent by the crown to bring both inventor and invention to safety, Ransom Falconer, Duke of Damerell, is shocked to learn Mr. Lambourne is a Miss.
Perhaps more shocking, however, are his feelings for the eccentric genius. She is everything he doesn’t like: incapable of following orders, unaware of conventional etiquette, preoccupied, disorganized, and unkempt. Yet she beguiles him. One of the most ingenious inventors in England, she is also one of the country’s greatest hopes in the defense against the power mad Napoleon Bonaparte. Now, if he could just get her mind out of the clouds and convince her to marry him . . .
Merlin is not absentminded, it’s just that she only seems to be able to pay attention to one thing at a time. And maybe she does take everything people say literally, but people ought to say what they mean. Now this Ransom Falconer wants her to forget her current interest in flying machines and focus on the speaking box she’s lost interest in finishing. It’s quite disconcerting. In fact, everything about him is disconcerting; in her isolated life Merlin has never met anyone who affects her quite like Ransom does.
With her trademark blend of heartwarming characters and a hilarious conflict, Midsummer Moon is yet another winner from the author of Flowers from the Storm, praised by Lisa Kleypas as “the gold standard in historical romance.”
Laura Kinsale
<p>Laura Kinsale is a winner and multiple nominee for the Best Book of the Year award given by the Romance Writers of America. She became a romance writer after six years as a geologist -- a career which consisted of getting out of bed in the middle of the night and driving hundreds of miles alone across west Texas to sit at drilling rigs, wear a hard hat, and attempt to boss around oil-covered males considerably larger than herself. This, she decided, was pushing her luck. So she gave all that up to sit in a chair and stare into space for long periods of time, attempting to figure out What-Happens-Next. She and her husband David currently divide their time between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Texas.</p>
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Reviews for Midsummer Moon
148 ratings7 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Twee and--at times--rather annoying. The quality of the writing itself wasn't bad, but the plot was too much for me, with its implausible aphrodisiac salts and multiple chloroformed kidnappings. The characters were okay, but sort of meh: Merlin was a bit too oblivious and childish, and Ransom was...okay, but nothing to write home about. Not purely awful, but reading it felt like a waste of my time.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a ridiculous story and it can be very, very funny if you let yourself go with it.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Whoever designer the cover for this reissue (I saw some of the older covers) is a genius. This is a FABULOUS cover. Possibly one of the best I've ever seen. I mean, it's perfect.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Laura Kinsale is not your flufflifity fluff romantic. And yet, somehow, she has some of the most fluffity fluff "dear god, I wish this hero would strip me naked too," moments mixed with some of the best humor.
The most eligible widower in His Majesty’s domain: rich, titled, powerful, and more than passably attractive, if his female admirers were to be believed—flatly refused, on account of a broken kite.
It's very clear there's a few things I like in books:
-Heroines that I understand. I know we all wax on about 'strong women' and I frankly don't know what that means. I think strength can be demonstrated in many ways. Merlin was essentially super smart, super ambitious and kind of a flake. In all honesty, it suited an inventor and I don't think we'd call a male character like her 'weak' -- It may have been overplayed, but ]...eh, I have a complex relationship with that.
-Relationships that develop. In this book, that was fucking bizarre and I'm not gonna lie. While it may have been a head-scratcher, I went with it. I mean, it was Nicholas Boulton and Laura Kinsale and there's nothing else to be done. What resulted was a battle of wills, a jackass that knows he is manipulative, and a heroine with enough force in her sweetness to bring him down, yet enough tenacity to hold on to herself. And honestly, I loved Ransom. I really, really did. He was lovely and loyal, commanding, clever, and played beautifully by NB in the audio version.
He’d thought his offer of marriage was a matter of duty, of taking responsibility for errors committed—and never questioned why he’d persisted in it past all reason and rebuff.
Well, now he knew why. The explanation sat patiently on the carpet in front of him, with chestnut hair and cloudy gray eyes and skin that glowed like soft midsummer moonlight. He loved her; he wanted to stand beside her forever, be the man she turned to for comfort and companionship; the one she went to first with those crazy, clever notions of hers; the one who listened and smiled and knew when to laugh—who recognized the difference between her accidental absurdities and the rare times she made an authentic quip in that quiet, ingenious way she had.
Oh, and that's it. That's all I need. I get extra-some heat, wonderful family and supporting dynamics, a little danger, some big weaknesses. It was a lovely little novel about two opposite strengths making one completely convincing and supportive couple. They were neither dependent nor overly independent of one another, something I can see lasting for a long, long time. Because they both try.
Wings, indeed. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Midsummer Moon was a little slow sometimes and I can't say I really liked either of the characters, but somehow Kinsale makes it work.There is an edge of old school romance where I think hero is a little more forceful in his seduction than I prefer.I also have a hard time believing that anyone could be as daft as the heroine.I still give it a 3.5. It is a memorable regency romance.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Light , laugh out loud read!
Not sure I believe the romance between H and h , however it does not take away from my reading enjoyment! whole cast of characters is a pure delight! - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This books lacks a story and it desperately needs an editor who know his/her work. 480 pages of which 200 are redundant. Shes so caught up with the entire invention bug that she spends close to 300 pages telling us of the heroine genius and of the bullying hero. All incidents with the right editing would have brought the count down by 100 pages. There are also all these extra characters that she seems to have forgotten how to develop. The worst of the pack is an intelligence army major who spends more time seducing the sister than actually doing any investigation.
Book preview
Midsummer Moon - Laura Kinsale
Chapter 1
For the fourth time, His Grace the Duke of Damerell lifted the knocker with his free hand and brought the tarnished brass crashing down on its mottled-green base. For the fourth time, the sound echoed on the other side of the oaken door, unanswered. Ransom Falconer’s mouth drew back in the faintest hint of a grimace.
He and his horse appeared to be the only civilized creatures within five square miles. Had he thought otherwise, he would never have allowed himself such a show of emotion. The overgrown Tudor walls rose above him, gray stone and neglect, an affront to the values of ten generations of Falconers. Admittedly, from where he stood on the threshold Ransom could see the romantic possibilities of the place: shaped gables and tall oriel windows and dark spreading trees, but at the very thought of such sentimentality those Falconer ghosts seemed to stare in haughty disapproval at his back. Without conscious intention, his own aristocratic features hardened into that hereditary expression of disdain.
Princes had been known to quail before such a look. There had been a few kings, too, and innumerable queens and duchesses and courtly ladies, all struck dumb and uneasy beneath the Falconer stare. Four centuries of power and politics had evolved and improved the expression, until by Ransom’s time it was a weapon of chilling efficiency. He himself had learned it early—at his grandfather’s elegant knee.
As it was, when at last the rusty lock creaked and crashed and the door opened on a complaining groan, the figure peering out from the gloom received the full force of His Grace’s pitiless mien. The young maid would have been forgiven by a host of knowledgeable Whigs if she’d turned tail and run in the instant before Ransom recalled himself and softened his expression. But she did not. She merely wiped her hands on a grimy white apron and lifted a pair of vaguely frowning gray eyes. Yes?
she asked, in a voice which might have been testy had it not been so preoccupied. What is it?
Ransom held out his card in one immaculately gloved hand.
She took the card. Without even glancing at it, she stuck the engraved identification into one bulging pocket of her apron.
Ransom watched his calling card disappear, shocked to the core of his pedigreed soul at such poorly trained service. Mr. Lambourne is at home?
he prompted, keeping his voice quietly modulated. She might be a country mouse of a maid, a shade too softly rounded to be in vogue, but she was a pretty chit with those misty-gray eyes and elegant cheekbones, made more striking by the stark simplicity of her coiled chestnut hair. Not that His Grace the Duke of Damerell was in the habit of dallying with housemaids—she was not at all in his usual style in any case—but he found no advantage in needlessly frightening her. Ransom even allowed himself a moment’s human pleasure, his glance resting briefly on her full lower lip before he looked up and lifted one eyebrow in expectant question.
She blinked at him. He found himself experiencing a peculiar sensation. Her eyes held his, but it was as if she did not even see him standing there, but looked past him at some distant horizon. Her mouth puckered. She lifted her hand, resting one delicate forefinger on that sweetly shaped lower lip.
Square the coefficient of the diameter of the number three strut,
she murmured.
I beg your pardon?
She blinked again and dropped her hand. Her eyes came into soft focus. Can you remember that?
I’m afraid I don’t…
His voice trailed off as she rummaged in her huge pocket and drew out his calling card. After another moment’s search, she located a pencil lead and scribbled something on the back of his card. There,
she said, with husky satisfaction. She dropped the card into her pocket and looked up at him with an absent smile. Who are you?
His earlier affront at her excruciatingly bad training returned, cooling his momentary startlement back to full reason. I believe I delivered my card,
he said pointedly.
Oh.
A becoming blush spread up from her modest collar, but he forced himself to ignore it. Well, not to concentrate on it, at any event. She had skin like an August peach, soft and golden and touched with pink.
She was rummaging again in her apron. The Pocket, as he termed it to himself, seemed to be burgeoning with peculiar paraphernalia. A jay’s feather, a tiny telescope, a tangled length of wire, and a flat-toothed metal disk with a hole in the center—all appeared from the depths into which his card had vanished. She looked down, poking out the tip of her tongue in a child’s gesture of concentration.
It was not The Pocket so much as the sleepy hedgehog she produced that left him nonplussed. She held the creature out to him, still fussing in her pocket with the other hand. He accepted the animal in dumbfounded silence. She located the card at last and glanced at the engraving, frowning. Then she flipped the creamy rectangle over.
Oh, yes.
She heaved a sigh of relief. Square the coefficient of the diameter of the—what does that say? Three? Yes, the number three strut.
She looked up at him with a small, accusing frown. I thought you were to remember that.
Forgive me,
he said icily, but I wish to see Mr. Lambourne, if it won’t tax you too much to announce me.
She looked completely blank. He was beginning to think that she was unbalanced in her mind when she repeated, Who did you say you were?
He fixed his Falconer gaze with ferocious intent upon the card in her hand. After a moment she said, Oh,
in a satisfactorily flustered way, which assured him that his Doomsday look had not completely lost effect after all. It also had the result of producing another pleasing blush.
She bit her tongue and glanced quickly at the engraving, then back at him. Um—Mr. Duke, I think you are mistaken in your direction.
He felt himself going pale, all those generations of Falconers gasping in absolute and utter stupefaction. Falconer.
His voice came out with strained gentleness. My name is Falconer. The other is—my title.
Oh.
She frowned at the card. Oh, yes. I see that. But—
I wish to speak to Mr. Lambourne,
he interrupted, still with that disciplined softness that was compounded of exasperation and restrained impatience. The hedgehog rolled up and presented its spines to his palm. Her full breasts rose and fell lightly beneath the plain blouse. He could just see the aureoles, faint smudges against the stiff fabric.
Abruptly, he added, Am I mistaken in believing that this is the home of Mr. Merlin Lambourne?
Well,
she said with round-eyed apology. Yes.
His sources were not so ill-informed as to allow him to fall for that sad little attempt at dissembling. Ransom treated her to the full extent of the Falconer stare. She seemed to have the way of it now, for her breasts rose and fell a little faster in agitation, and she ran her tongue over her upper lip.
There is no Mr. Merlin Lambourne,
she said quickly.
Indeed.
He held her with the stare, while she shifted and looked frightened, and he had the unhappy thought that it was rather like pinning a butterfly to a board. But he was on his country’s business, and unpleasantries were common enough in that line of work. He could not afford to leave here without speaking to Merlin Lambourne if the man was still alive.
It dawned on Ransom that perhaps that was what she meant. Perhaps the old man had died. It had been a week since that last ill-fated report, and the report itself had been confusing, with word that Lambourne had appeared on some days in the garden hale and healthy, and on others looking like a walk to the back gate would finish him.
Damn the man, to die before England could make proper use of him. Ransom swallowed a stronger oath and allowed his mouth to soften slightly. Forgive me. If there’s been a recent bereavement…
He let his words trail off suggestively, but she only looked at him without comprehension. And there was no sign of mourning in her dress. So—the old man was still alive, certainly, and she was only trying to fuddle Ransom with this nonsense. He found it ridiculously transparent and wondered that such amateur efforts had managed to prevent one of his best agents from making contact weeks ago with the reclusive Mr. Lambourne.
Miss.
He did not hide his impatience any longer. Mr. Lambourne has specifically requested that I call on him. I must ask you to conduct me without delay, or I fear I shall be forced to report your recalcitrant behavior to him myself.
This was sheer bluff, but of the type at which His Grace of Damerell excelled. It seemed to work. Her eyebrows lifted, creating a little anxious furrow above her nose, and she put her finger to her lower lip in that absent gesture that managed to set his blood running in a particularly embarrassing manner. Requested you call? Oh, dear—is that possible? But I—
She gave the card a puzzled look. Damerell. Damerell. This is most—I’m so mortified, but I’m afraid I don’t recall…
She took a deep breath and met his eyes with the air of finally seeing him for the first time. Damerell,
she repeated, as if trying to convince herself of the name. Do come in, Mr. Damerell.
Falconer,
he corrected dryly. Damerell as in ‘the Duke of—’
He lifted his hands, one full of hedgehog and the other full of his horse’s reins. I’m afraid you’ll have to relieve me of my burdens.
Oh!
She blushed again, worse than a schoolroom miss, though he judged her to be well on the shelf if she weren’t married. The middle range of twenty, certainly, for though she still retained that pleasing trace of babyish roundness, she’d gained some tiny laugh-lines about her eyes. Ransom’s London ladies would have despaired over laugh-lines.
Ransom, perversely, found them enchanting.
She reached for the hedgehog, drew back quickly without finding a break in the spiny ball, and moved closer. She held The Pocket wide with both hands. Just drop him in.
Ransom looked down for a moment on the top of her head, where the shining hair was drawn into an uneven part. He had an instant’s notion of correcting that zig-zag line—a notion which brought a vision of her with the chestnut mass tumbling about her shoulders…
For God’s sake, he admonished himself. He shook off that line of thought with alacrity.
He cleared his throat and sent the hedgehog tumbling into her offered pocket with a tilt of his palm. The animal squirmed and settled, apparently content with such cavalier treatment.
You’d best leave your horse,
she said, as if he had been about to lead the beast into the hall. Thaddeus must have gone off. I signaled and signaled, and he never answered.
Ransom draped the reins over the doorpost obligingly, not caring if the hired animal wandered off. It was worth the price of a job horse if he could interview Merlin Lambourne. The misty-eyed maid stood back, holding open the door.
Ransom stepped inside. It was a dark, wide passage, full of odd shapes and unidentifiable masses crowded along the walls and piled in the shadowy corners. She backed up to give Ransom room, knocking over something that fell with a metallic clang.
With little flustered mutters, she righted the object, holding it up and frowning a moment at the webbed network of wire and round weights that hung from a wooden frame. Whatever is that, do you suppose?
The distressed puzzlement in her voice made him want to smile. He suppressed the notion ruthlessly. Perhaps, as its inventor, Mr. Lambourne could enlighten you.
She looked up, squinting at him in the dim light. "Oh, dear. I thought you understood. There is no Mr. Lambourne. I’m Merlin."
Pardon me?
"I said, she enunciated, with the patient expression of a person speaking to an elderly deaf-mute,
that I’m Merlin."
You’re Merlin.
Yes. You’ll have heard of John Joseph Merlin. The Ingenious Mechanick. I’m named for him. I daresay my papa would not have liked it at all, but he was killed, and so Uncle Dorian said it was no business of his. Not that I’m the equal of Mr. Merlin, of course, but I think I’ve made some progress in my own way. Would you like to see my wing design?
With a menace that would have made Parliament tremble, Ransom repeated slowly, "You are Merlin Lambourne?"
Have you heard of me?
She looked enormously pleased. "I expect you read my monograph on the Aeronautical Implications of the Perichondral Tissue of Garrulus glandarius."
No,
he said stiffly. I did not.
Oh. Well, I can give you a copy. I had five hundred printed.
She bit her lip, and then added, There are four hundred and ninety-seven left, so you may have as many as you like.
He drew a breath, looked at the hopeful expression in those soft gray eyes, and for a silent moment wavered between fury and reason, cursing his fool agents and the nonexistent Mr. Lambourne and everyone else from Bonaparte on down. In the lingering pause, her eager lips began to droop.
He watched her fade like a wilting flower and suddenly heard himself say, Thank you. I shall take twelve dozen.
Twelve dozen!
She looked astonished, and then doubtful. He prepared to issue a gallant insistence, but she only protested, If you’ve only the one horse, you can’t carry them all.
I’ll send for my man.
Ah.
She nodded wisely. Will you give them to your scientific friends? You must have a vast acquaintance, to need twelve dozen.
Vast. And I shall donate a copy to each of the various lending libraries, of course, as well as the universities.
Shall you? Indeed! Why—Oh, that is a—Oh, my, I don’t know what to say!
He looked down at her. Really, it was too pathetically easy. The joy on her face made him want to ask for another twelve or thirteen dozen. She took an excited little hop backward and knocked the unidentified object over again. The hall rang to a discordant clatter. She bent hastily, picking up the mysterious framework.
Sorry.
She colored a little, clutching the contraption and peering at him from under her eyelashes with a tentative smile. Perhaps when I see it in better light I can recall what it is.
And His Grace the Duke of Damerell, the scourge of Whigs, the advisor of princes, the ambassador, minister, man-of-the world, looked down at her and found himself smiling back.
Merlin’s problem, Theodore and Thaddeus had always told her, was that she thought too hard.
Uncle Dorian had violently disagreed, of course. Concentration was her best quality, he’d always said. Uncle Dorian had been sure she could accomplish anything. His last words to her had been, Keep thinking, Merlin. You can fly. The answer is…
The answer is…what?
How like Uncle Dorian to forget what he was going to say.
For five years that unfinished sentence had haunted her. It seemed she didn’t know any answers, though she tried and tried to build a machine that could fly. Uncle Dorian’s dream seemed so close, sometimes, so near her grasp, and then a test wing collapsed or a propellant gave a vicious pop and her model was left in tatters on the ground. The corridor was lined with pieces of her failures.
She tripped on a discarded orrery, making the wheel-works that moved the miniature solar system ring. A white blur moved quickly near her ear as the duke caught a tottering axle-rod in his gloved hand before it descended on her head.
Careful,
he said sharply.
Merlin ducked and apologized.
The Duke of Damerell, she repeated to herself. Or was it the Duke of Falconer? He seemed excessively sensitive over the difference. But she couldn’t seem to focus on anything about him, except his face and his height. Her cursed concentration again, which caught hold of a thought or an image and would not let go. Just now, she could picture him in exquisite detail as she had just seen him, when first she had opened the door. She could see his thick brown hair beneath his hat, ruthlessly trained into neatness, and the dark eyebrows just as fiercely tamed. His eyes had looked yellow-green in the dappled shade outside, and his nose and mouth as elegant and wild as a gyrfalcon’s fine-drawn markings. Perhaps that was why they had picked him as the Duke of Falconer. He looked uncannily like a smiling hawk.
She stumbled on something that fell with a dull thump and heard him utter a muffled oath behind her as his hands steadied her shoulders. Sorry,
she said miserably. He kept his hand beneath her elbow as she negotiated the last of the dim-lit passage and turned aside into the central hall.
One look at the jumble that filled the large room made her realize it was no place to entertain a visitor. Merlin knew she was no housekeeper, but when had she let things come to this? A rusted steam boiler, the fraying basket of a hot-air balloon, a discarded vacuum pump, and a damaged paddle—in the pale sunlight through grimy windows the place looked like a battlefield. She picked her way through the silent confusion, bending to slip beneath the massive sweep of a broken wing that cast a shadow across the narrow path like a great, weary bat.
The duke came behind her. He made no comment on the chaos, but she sensed his opinion in the way he inspected the caked grease that had smeared across his glove from the falling axle-rod.
The short flight of stairs to the solar was clear, at least, if only because it provided the single passage from her laboratory to this…storage. Put it in storage,
she’d said a thousand times to Theodore or Thaddeus, and never looked to see where the item had gone. Well, now she knew. It had gone to the great-hall and been dumped, and if she’d always been too preoccupied before to notice the accumulating mass, she certainly saw it now.
The solar was a slight improvement. Only half the size of the great-hall, it contained crowded laboratory tables and smaller pieces of equipment, roils of wire and cases of glass beakers, and hundreds of leather-bound books strewn about in a mild degree of organization. At least she knew where a chair was. Under two feet of journals, which required several moments of exertion to remove.
She stood back from her labors, panting slightly, and offered him a seat.
Thank you,
he said. I prefer to stand.
Merlin blinked at him. Oh. Forgive me. I suppose you must have rheumatism?
A fine curve appeared at the corner of his mouth and quivered there as he said solemnly, I enjoy the best of health, thank you. But I was taught by a formidable nanny that a gentleman does not sit in the presence of a lady.
Merlin, lost in rapt contemplation of that intriguing masculine dimple, took a moment to realize that by a lady,
he meant her. Oh,
she said, and sat down.
He tilted his head, surveying the cluttered room. His gaze lingered on a large wooden crate from which a tangle of wires led to a set of wheels and pulleys. He stared at the object a moment and then looked down at her with that odd half-smile. In the sidelight from the window his hair danced with gold and red. "It is Miss Lambourne, then, whom I have the pleasure of addressing?"
Merlin nodded and hoped he wouldn’t begin calling her "Miss Lambourne in that soft and dignified way. She had a feeling that in one of her frequent reveries she would not answer to anything but a sharply enunciated
Miss Merlin, hey!", which was what Theodore and Thaddeus had found to be moderately successful.
You seem to be quite an inventress,
the duke said. What is that object, if I may inquire?
Merlin frowned at the wooden crate and wires. It was to help me string the framework for my full-sized aviation machine. It didn’t work.
I see.
He looked around again, as if seeking something, and then at Merlin. His light eyes were alert and piercing. "And what have you made that does work?"
Her shoulders drew down. Of all the questions he might have asked, that one was the least welcome. She looked at his shiny boots amidst the dust-balls on the floor. Nothing, I’m afraid. It’s very discouraging. I believe the whole problem is weight and propulsion. And stability, of course. The models are so difficult to upscale. The wooden struts are too heavy, you see, and that makes the wing proportions far too—
Quite,
he interrupted, just as she was gaining momentum in her explanation. And you’ve had no progress in anything besides aviation?
Merlin raised her eyes in surprise. "Oh, no. I’ve devoted all my thought to the flying machine. And truly, I have had some little success with my models—"
Yes, of course.
He was frowning at various objects in turn around the room. But nothing else? What is that, for instance?
Merlin looked at the carved mahogany piece that had caught his attention. He was scrutinizing it with an intensity that suggested he hoped it might hold the secrets of the universe.
Uncle Dorian’s old wardrobe,
she said timidly. I keep an extra cloak in it.
His mouth flattened into annoyance, and she added in hasty self-defense, It gets quite cold in here in the winter.
No doubt.
The duke lowered his brows, glowering at her in a way that made her feel quite giddy. Miss Lambourne, I must be truthful with you. I’ve come here in the utmost secrecy on behalf of His Majesty and the Lords of the Admiralty. It has come to our attention that you are in possession of a device which could be invaluable in the defense of your country.
I am?
Merlin asked in a small voice.
His half-smile returned, this time with a much more unpleasant hardness to it. I had hoped that you would not be so foolish as to deny it. I can provide you with every necessary evidence of my identity and my position with the government, so you need not fear that you are dealing with the other side.
Oh, no!
she said. Of course not.
She put her forefinger to her lower lip, just remembering in time not to bite her nail. What other side is that?
His gaze lingered a moment on her hand. She quickly lowered it and folded her fingers in her lap.
The French, Miss Lambourne. You are aware that we are at war?
Well, yes, I—
She met the cold disapproval in his eyes and added humbly, I’m afraid I don’t go out much.
So I apprehend. Let me assure you that we are, indeed, at war and in need of every patriotic effort which our citizens can provide.
A heavy silence filled the room as Merlin tried very hard not to drop her gaze like a chastened child. She had a notion that the duke would not like such craven behavior. She wished that he would smile at her again as he had in the passageway below—an honest smile and not this ironic curl of his lips.
Miss Lambourne,
he said, will you not help us?
She swallowed and nodded. He looked at her expectantly. Another long pause followed while the waiting lift of his brows gradually drew down into another frown.
Miss Lambourne, I beg you not to play games with me. Where is the invention?
The invention,
she repeated, her eyes widening in comprehension and distress. "My invention? Oh, dear, but it wouldn’t be of any use to you at all. It’s far from ready—the wings aren’t at all satisfactory, and the body from the model won’t work in full size. I have to put all the stabilizing and maneuvering equipment at the aeronaut’s feet, and there’s very little space. I haven’t even tried it myself yet."
He gave a huff of impatience. I don’t mean your damned flying machine!
He swept the room again with a frustrated glare. There must be something else—haven’t you anything else?
No, no, I told you—I haven’t wasted a minute! I’ve worked on the aviation machine since Uncle Dorian died. And I’m very close. Truly I am. I’d like to help you, but it’s much too soon to experiment with a human being. Perhaps if you could wait another few months—
He leaned over her suddenly with one hand on the back of her chair and the other covering her fingers in a hard grip. Miss Lambourne—my dear Miss Lambourne—please try to understand. This is no trifling matter. A week ago a man was found dead. His throat cut. He was trying to reach my office with messages of the greatest importance. They were in cipher, Miss Lambourne, but one of them mentioned you and this—invention. It is very possible—probable—that the code was broken.
He looked at her with an intensity that made her feel hopelessly stupid. Is that very bad?
With a harsh laugh he let go of her. Only if you value your life and your country. I intend to remove you and this invention of yours to a safe place, Miss Lambourne. Immediately.
Remove me! Oh, I’m afraid that is impossible, Mr.—um—
Duke,
he suggested. Please don’t tax your mind with trivialities. Just gather your things and let us be on our way to a safer place.
She stared at him. You cannot be serious. I can’t leave now, just on the verge of perfecting my wing!
For God’s sake, we’ll take your wing with us. In fact, we’ll take everything with us. I don’t know what my agent meant by a revolutionary despatch apparatus, but he was no fool. I’ll swear it wasn’t a bloody fantastical flying machine.
Merlin rose instantly in defense of her dream. I’m sure that was exactly what he meant, sir! What better way to deliver despatches than by air? Why, if it is military despatches you have in mind, just think! You could have orders across the Channel in a matter of hours.
Nonsense,
he said. More likely I could have a broken head in a matter of seconds.
Merlin stood up, deeply affronted. Finding herself nose-to-chest with his muscular form was somewhat daunting, so instead of tossing him on his ear as she had desired to do, she said coolly, Shall I see you out?
I’m not going anywhere, Miss Lambourne. Not without you.
But that’s—But you—
She spread her hands. Oh, this is quite stupid. There is only the aviation machine. Why should you insist on my going with you if you think it’s worthless?
He leaned against the cluttered laboratory table and crossed his arms with a casualness that aggravated her temper. Disabuse yourself of the notion that it was your flying machine which so impressed my late colleague. I don’t employ agents who are prone to hyperbole. If man had been meant to fly—
Thank you very much, Mr. Duke, but you needn’t repeat that old adage. I’m familiar with the sentiment.
Falconer,
he said.
Pardon me?
Ransom Falconer. Fourth Duke of Damerell. Most people call me Your Grace, but really, I believe I could come to like Mr. Duke just as well. Shall you ring for tea while I take a look round?
Merlin drew in a dignified breath. He appeared to have every intention of standing there against her laboratory table forever. With what she considered to be freezing politeness, she said, Please look all you like, but you will have to move aside a step if you would like tea.
Certainly.
He straightened, with a brief flash of that smile that had pleased her in the hallway below. It softened Merlin’s annoyance and made her feel suddenly shy again.
She ducked her head and reached for a large box on the table, taking hold of the crank and sending it whirling. After a moment, she leaned over as she was cranking and carefully closed a small metal flap between two wires. A blue arc of light crackled inside a glass jar. Merlin stopped turning the crank and put her mouth close to the cone-shaped depression in the box. Thaddeus!
she called. Thaddeus, do you hear me?
From the box came a faint, steady hiss as she waited. She tapped nervously on the table, aware of her guest’s eyes upon her back. The duke would be wanting his tea, she thought, and hoped that Thaddeus would answer.
The silence stretched, filled only with the hum of the box. Merlin doubled up her fist and rubbed it on the tabletop. A duke. She had an idea he would be accustomed to better service than this. For the first time in her memory, she looked around her laboratory and thought that it seemed a hopeless, shabby mess. The hedgehog squirmed in her pocket, and she absently reached for a sunflower seed and dropped it inside.
The sound of the alarm bell made her jump. Thank goodness, Thaddeus had heard her signal. His voice came out of the box, faint and hissing and none too pleased. Aye, Miss Merlin? What’s it now?
Tea, Thaddeus,
she said, trying to sound very certain of herself. I have a guest.
There was a fuzzy pause and a crackle and then Thaddeus’s voice again. —tea, you say? And do—
The voice was lost in noise and then returned. —middle of—back garden and up to me knees in mud, Miss Merlin?
Merlin pressed her lips together. The duke was staring a hole in her back, she was sure. Thaddeus,
she said forcefully, bring us tea immediately.
Poo—Mi—lin—now. Ye ain’t—self!
Thaddeus. Stand still. You know I can’t understand you if you carry the box about like that. Stand still, Thaddeus. Do you hear me? Stand still!
The voice answered, suddenly much louder. Aye, I hear ye, Miss Merlin. You be making your own tea. I’m goin’ out to the dairy barn now. I’ll be takin’ your pesty speaking box wi’ me, but don’t you go ringin’ me little bell for no silly tea. Ye know I got the works o’ two to be doin’, what with Theo down.
Thaddeus—
She said his name twice, but he was gone. She had only the hiss of electricity through the ether for response.
With a sigh of defeat, she opened the metal switch. The blue arc sparked and died, along with the hum. Merlin turned, biting her lip in apology. About your tea—can you wait a minute while I go to the kitchen?
The duke was staring at the little box and its single wire. God in Heaven,
he said in a strangled voice. Great God—
He raised his eyes. To Merlin’s astonishment he let out a whoop that rang jubilation off the old stone walls. She found herself grabbed and squashed and pounded in a bruising embrace. As she flung her chin up and gasped for breath, she had only an instant to register the softness of fine cloth on her cheek before he kissed her, full on the mouth—a rough, undignified, and consuming kiss that was all mixed up with the thumping on her back and the ache in her lungs and the really painful way he was standing on the toe of her left shoe—not that she cared, but the hedgehog might be squeezed, and, oh…oh, my, well.
It was over before Merlin had time to realize it had started—or at least before she had time to realize that she was enjoying being mauled. He let her go and stood back with a grin that made her throat feel peculiar and trembly. Merlin Lam—
He was as breathless, if not as bruised, as she. Merlin Lambourne,
he declared, between pants. "By God, you are a genius!"
Chapter 2
It had been thirty-odd years ago, at the age of five, that Ransom could last recall having such difficulty with his table manners. Trying gamely to swallow the overcooked mutton without choking, he postponed sawing at another bite and put his full concentration on chewing. The toughness of the meat would have made scintillating dinner repartee difficult, but any hopes of mere polite conversation had been quickly put to rest by his hostess.
Miss Lambourne sat across the ancient, scarred table from him. Reading. In the fading light from the low windows, her full lips moved softly, and that little worried furrow came and went in the smooth skin of her brow. She had finished her mutton in a quarter of the time he was taking—for which he could only admire the strength of her teeth—and now between pages she tore off chunks of glutinous bread, alternating bites between herself and the hedgehog. The creature had been deposited in a convenient bowl and placed in the center of the table—in the absence of a suitably imposing silver epergne, Ransom supposed.
Does it make a nice pet?
he asked, tired of battling with the mutton.
She turned a page.
Yes,
he continued after a moment. I daresay it has all kind of uses. And quite decorative, too.
The pucker formed between her brows, and she marked her place with a finger. Pardon me?
Does it make a nice pet, I was wondering.
Pet?
Her thick lashes swept down and up. Ransom had the sudden and painful urge to kiss her within an inch of her life again, on the theory that she would surely have to take notice of him then. What pet?
The epergne,
he said, with a little flick of his finger toward the spiny centerpiece.
She looked at him blankly for a moment, and then, in a tone he imagined she reserved for agreeing with raving lunatics, said, Why yes, I’m sure you must be right.
Ransom smiled and wished she wouldn’t stare at his mouth while her tongue teased at her upper lip in that damned provocative way.
Would you pass the salt, if you please?
he asked, to break the moment.
She looked from his mouth to his plate. He could see the slow change, the dawning of common awareness. It was a fascinating process, this transition from deep dreaming to daylight—rather like the passing of a morning’s mist into full sun. But no, he thought as he watched her, not so harsh a change as that. More like the lazy rise of a full moon to light the summer midnight.
Oh,
she said, frowning at his laden plate. Do you dislike mutton?
With a strong jaw and the addition of a little salt, I expect I’ll manage to hack my way through.
She pursed her lips and looked about the table. After a moment her gaze alighted on the hedgehog. Oh, dear.
Ransom lifted his eyebrows.
The salt cellar,
she said. I’m afraid…
He looked at the hedgehog. It stared back at him with beady innocence. Yes, it seemed to say between twitches of its sharp little nose, I’m in the salt cellar, and I’m bloody pleased about it.
The creature’s air of simpleminded spite reminded Ransom of a few Whigs he knew.
I’ll find some.
Miss Lambourne rose quickly, getting tangled for a moment in her skirts as she scanned the laden shelves and counters that lined the dining room walls. Ransom watched her begin to push jars and crockery about, opening lids and peering inside and adding to the general disorder in the room as she set each container hastily aside.
When Ransom had invited himself to high tea, he’d imagined that the service would be rustic. He’d not been completely prepared for an inedible meal served by a grouchy old man with a head as bald as a baby’s, who seemed to think it the height of effrontery that he should be asked to clear off the dining table so that his mistress and her guest could eat in such unwonted elegance.
On the other hand, Thaddeus Flowerdew seemed to have no qualms about the propriety of the situation. He left Miss Lambourne in the room with Ransom as if it were an everyday occurrence for an unchaperoned lady of the finest breeding to dine alone with a strange man. A few probing questions and Miss Lambourne’s usual vague answers had assured Ransom that her situation was shamefully irregular. The fact that it made his own mission much easier to have no proper guardian present did not obscure the fact that Miss Lambourne deserved far better than this.
From the moment when