He drew a deep breath, then stepped closer and reached for her hand; his eyes on hers, he brushed his lips across her fingertips. "My dear Honoria Prudence, will you do me the honor of being my wife, my duchess-" He paused, then deliberately added: "The mother of my children?"
Her gaze flickered; she looked away. Placing one fingertip under her chin, Devil turned her face back.
After a fractional hesitation, Honoria lifted her lids and met his eyes. "I haven't yet made up my mind." He might not be able to lie-she could. But he was too potent a force to surrender to without being absolutely certain. A few more days would give her time to check her decision.
He held her gaze; between them, passion lingered, shivering in the air.
"Don't take too long."
The words, uttered softly, could have been a warning or a plea. Retrieving her fingers from his clasp, Honoria lifted her chin free of his touch. "If I married you, I would want to be assured no incident similar to the present contretemps would occur again."
"I've told you I'm not daft." Devil's eyes glinted. "And I'm certainly no advocate of self-torture."
Ruthlessly, Honoria suppressed her smile.
The planes of Devil's face shifted; he caught her hand. "Come for a drive."
"One more point…" Honoria held firm. She met the aggravation in his eyes, and tried not to feel the warmth, the seductive strength in the fingers and palm clasping hers. "Tolly's murder."
Devil's jaw firmed. "I will not let you involve yourself in the search for his killer."
Honoria met his gaze directly; again, she sensed their wills locking, this time without heat. "I wouldn't need to actively search for clues if you told me what you and your cousins discover as soon as you discover it." She'd exhausted all avenues open to her; she needed his cooperation to go on.
He frowned, then looked away; she'd started to wonder what he was thinking before he looked back. "I'll agree on one condition."
Honoria raised her brows.
"That you promise that under no circumstances whatever will you personally go searching for Tolly's killer."
Honoria promptly nodded. Her ability to come up with any male felon was severely limited by the social code; her contribution to the investigation would have to be primarily deductive. "So what did Lucifer learn?"
Devil's lips thinned. "I can't tell you."
Honoria stiffened.
"No!" He squeezed her hand. "Don't rip up at me-I said 'can't,' not 'won't.'"
Honoria narrowed her eyes. "Why 'can't'?"
Devil searched her face, then looked down at their linked hands. "Because what Lucifer learned casts a far from flattering light on one of the family, probably Tolly. Unfortunately, Lucifer's information was rumor-we've yet to establish the facts." He studied her slim digits entwined with his, then tightened his grip and looked up. "However, if Tolly was involved, then it suggests a possible scenario whereby someone-someone capable of the act or of procuring the same-might have wanted him dead."
Honoria noted the fastidiousness that had crept into his expression. "It's something disreputable, isn't it?" She thought of Louise Cynster.
Slowly, Devil nodded. "Exceedingly disreputable."
Honoria drew in a long breath-then gasped as a tug set her on course for the door.
"You need some air," Devil decreed. He shot her a glance, then admitted through clenched teeth: "So do I."
Towed in his wake, Honoria grinned. Her gown was too thin, but she could don her pelisse at the front door. She had won a host of concessions; she could afford to be magnanimous. The day was fine; her heart was light. And her wolf had reached the end of his tether.
Chapter 13
"I make it 334." Honoria restacked the lists in her lap and started counting again.
His gaze on her profile, Devil raised his brows. They were in the morning room, Honoria at one end of the chaise while he sprawled elegantly at the other; she was adding up the acceptances for the grand ball his aunt Horatia was to host in Berkeley Square the next night, to declare the family out of mourning. Smiling, Devil retrieved a list from the floor. "That's a goodly number for this time of year. The weather's put back the shooting, so many have stayed in town. Like Chillingworth-it appears my aunt has seen fit to invite him."
"He is an earl." Honoria glanced up, frowned, then reached over and tugged at the list. "But I gather you've known him forever."
"It certainly seems like forever. We were at Eton together."
"Rivals from your earliest years?"
"I wouldn't class Chillingworth as a rival-more like a nuisance."
Honoria looked down, hiding her grin. Devil had taken to joining her in the morning room in the post-luncheon hour during which the Dowager habitually rested. He would stay for half an hour, long limbs disposed in the opposite corner of the chaise, his presence filling the room, dominating her senses. They would chat; if he had information from his cousins, he would tell her, simply and straightforwardly, without evasion.
From her own efforts, she'd learned nothing more. The Dowager had fulfilled her stated intention of introducing her to the ton; through a mind-numbing round of morning calls, "at-homes," and afternoon teas, she had met all the major hostesses and been accepted as one of their circle. But in all the gossip and scandalmongering abounding amongst the female half of the ton, not a single scrap had she heard regarding Tolly.
She looked up. "Have you heard anything?"
"As it happens, I have." Honoria opened her eyes wide; Devil's lips quirked wryly. "Don't get your hopes up, but Demon's back."
"Did he find Tolly's man?"
"Yes. Mick remembered that last night clearly-Tolly, to use Mick's words, was 'in a right spate' when he came in. Unfortunately, Tolly refused to tell him anything concerning the who, the why, or the what."
Honoria frowned. "Refused?"
"Mick-being Mick-asked."
"And?"
"Uncharacteristically got told, in no uncertain terms, to mind his own business."
"That was odd?"
Devil nodded. "Mick had been with Tolly since Tolly was in shortcoats. If he was troubled over something, the most likely occurrence is that Tolly would have talked it over, without reservation, with Mick."
"So." Honoria considered. "What sort of secret would Tolly refuse to discuss with Mick?"
"That, indeed, is the question." His gaze on her face, on the slight frown disturbing the sweeping arch of her brows, Devil added: "Along with the puzzle of the time."
"The time?"
"That night, Tolly got in less than an hour after he left Mount Street."
They'd assumed Tolly had been out half the night, at some function at which he'd learned the secret that led to his death. Honoria's frown deepened. "Is Mick sure?"
"Positive-he remembers particularly as he hadn't expected Tolly back so soon."
Honoria nodded. "How far is it from Mount Street to Tolly's lodgings?"
"His lodgings were in Wigmore Street-about twenty minutes from my uncle's house."
"Was there any particular house-of a friend, perhaps-where he might have stopped along the way?"
"Nothing directly in his path. And none close that we haven't checked. None of his friends saw him that night."
Honoria caught Devil's eye. "How does such a short time fit with Lucifer's discreditable rumor?"
"Not well." Devil hesitated, then added, "It doesn't rule it out, but it makes it unlikely. If Tolly had gone-" He broke off, then continued: "If what we thought had happened, then it most likely happened at some earlier date, which doesn't explain why Tolly only got agitated after he left Mount Street."