She didn't see the subtle smile that curved his lips. "There should be at least two documents listing the company's address. One is the main registration of the company, but that will in all likelihood be with the company. The other, however, is a document all solicitors prepare, but which many clients don't know about."
Reaching out, he tugged at the last sheet in the stack; she let him draw it free. He held it up, and smiled. "Here we are-the internal instructions for the firm on how to make contact with the client."
"Mr. Joshua Swales," she read. "Agent of the Central East Africa Gold Company, in the care of Mr. Henry Feaggins, 142 Fulham Road."
They reread the names and address, then Gabriel returned the sheet to the box. Taking the sheaf from the countess's hands, he rifled through it.
"What are you looking for?"
"I wondered if we'd be lucky enough to find a list of investors… or a list of promissory notes the firm's prepared… but no." Frowning, he restacked the papers. "Whoever they are, the company are certainly careful."
She held the box as he set the papers back in, then he closed and relocked it. Carrying the other boxes, she followed him back to the shelf. He restacked the boxes in the right order, then turned to discover her already back at the desk, setting it to rights, straightening the blotter, realigning the inkstand.
Completing a last visual scan of the room, he lifted the lamp. "Where did this come from?"
"The little table out here."
She led the way. Gabriel set the lamp down on the side table she indicated, then waited until she passed through the gate in the railings before turning the wick down. The light died. "Let's hope," he murmured, moving around the clerk's desk to the gate, "that the clerk is not the sort to keep a careful eye on the level of his lamp oil."
She returned no comment, but waited by the door.
Retrieving his cane, he opened it. She stepped through. He followed, shutting the door, then crouching down to turn the heavy tumblers of the lock. Not a simple task. They finally fell into place. "How on earth did you manage it?" he asked as he straightened.
"With difficulty."
Certainly not with a hairpin. Stifling his curiosity, he followed her down the stairs. Her heels clicked on the stone. Crossing the cobbles silently would be impossible. At the bottom of the stairs, he took her hand and placed it on his sleeve. She looked up at him-he assumed in surprise. "I presume your carriage is waiting?"
"At the far corner of the Fields."
"I'll escort you to it." In the circumstances, she could hardly argue, yet he knew she considered it. If she'd tried, he would have informed her that, courtesy of five tin boxes, she now had more chance of flying to her carriage than of dismissing him with nothing more than words.
There were rules to all engagements, in seduction as in war; he knew them all and was a past master at exploiting them for his own good. After the first clashes, every lady he'd ever engaged with had decided his exploitation had been for her good, too. Ultimately, the countess would not complain.
They set off, openly crossing the courtyard. He felt her fingers on his sleeve flutter nervously, then settle. He glanced at her veiled face, then let his gaze skate down her cloaked form. "You appear to be a recently bereaved widow who could thus have good reason for visiting the Inn late."
She glanced at him, then gave a slight nod and lifted her head.
Approving the imperious tilt to her chin, Gabriel looked ahead. She was no mean actress-there was now not a hint of trepidation to be seen. If he had to have a female partner, he was glad it was she. She could think, pick locks, and carry off a charade-all definite positives. Despite his irritation on first finding her here, he now felt in considerable charity with her role.
He would, of course, put his foot down and ensure she engaged in no more midnight searches, but that would have to wait until after they got past the porter nodding in his box by the gate. Head up, spine straight, the countess walked past as if the porter didn't exist. The man touched his fingers respectfully to his cap, then yawned and slouched back on his stool.
They walked on. In the shadows cast by the huge trees of the Fields, a small black carriage waited, the horses' heads hanging. As they neared, the coachman glanced around, then hunched over his reins.
Halting by the carriage, Gabriel opened the door.
The countess put out her hand. "Thank you-"
"In a moment." Taking her hand, he urged her into the carriage. He felt her puzzled glance as she complied. As she settled on the seat, he glanced at her coachman. "Brook Street-just past South Molton." With that, he followed the countess into the carriage and shut the door.
She stared at him, then scooted further over as he turned and sat beside her. The carriage rocked into motion.
After an instant's fraught silence, she said, "I wasn't aware I had offered you a ride."
Gabriel considered her veiled face. "No doubt you would have-I thought I'd save you the trouble."
He heard a small spurt of laughter, instantly suppressed. Lips curving, he faced forward. "After all, we need to consider our next move." He'd already mapped out several; all could be attempted in a closed carriage rolling through the night.
"Indeed." Her tone was equable.
"But first, a point I should have made plain at the outset. You asked for my help and I agreed to give it. You also asked for my promise not to seek out your identity."
She stiffened. "Have you?"
His lightheartedness evaporated. "I promised. So no. I haven't." Each word was clipped, each sentence definite. "But if you want me to play your game any further-if we're to continue our alliance and save your stepfamily from ruin-you'll have to promise to abide by my rules."
Her silence lasted for a good fifty yards. Then, "Your rules?"
He could feel her gaze on the side of his face; he continued to look forward.
"And what are they? These rules of yours."
"Rule number one-you must promise never again to act without my knowledge."
She stirred slightly. "Your knowledge!"
Gabriel hid a cynical smile; he'd dealt with women long enough not to label it "permission."
"If you and I act independently, especially in such a delicate affair as this, there's a good chance we'll cross tracks to disastrous effect. If that happens, and we reveal our interest to the company too early, then all you've worked for will go for nought. And you are not sufficiently au fait with how matters are dealt with in the City to appreciate all the ramifications of what we might learn, which is, after all, why you sought my help in the first place."
She had none of her sex's usual wariness of silence; again, she claimed it to calculate, to consider. As they swayed around a corner, she asked, "These rules-what are the others?"
"There are only two-I've told you one."
"And the second?"
He turned his head and looked at her. "For each piece of information we gather, I get to claim a reward."
"A reward?" Wariness had crept into her tone.
He suppressed a wolfish smile. "Reward-a customary token of gratitude given in return for services rendered."
She knew precisely what he meant, her knowledge clear in the fine tension that gripped her. After a moment, she cleared her throat. "What reward do you want?"
"For locating Thurlow and Brown-a kiss."
She went still-so still he wondered if he'd shocked her. But she could hardly be surprised-she knew very well who and what he was. From behind her veil, she stared at him, but if she was flustered, there was no sign of it-her hands, folded in her lap, remained still. "A kiss?"
"Hmm." This time, he couldn't stop his lips curving, couldn't suppress the seductive purr that entered his voice. "Without the veil. Take it off."