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"Yes. We can return here later. "

He blew out the lamp and they crawled back through the window. James latched it and they headed for the carriage.

"Are you sure he’s out?"

"I told you we would make sure before going through his smallclothes."

She bit back a smile.

The hackney was in the same place. James nodded at the driver but they walked past. Holt’s residence was nearby; it was easier and less suspicious to walk.

James had a firm grip on her hand. It was warm and comforting.

"What do you think we’ll find?"

"I don’t think we’ll find much, actually. Holt is a pro. If he doesn’t want something found, chances are it won’t be."

"Then should we even bother?"

"Yes. People make mistakes. And if our suspicions are correct, then he is playing a deep game."

Holt’s townhouse loomed in front of them and Calliope’s pulse quickened.

The house was dark. They skirted the back and stopped at a window overlooking a well-tended English garden.

James jiggled the window and it moved slightly.

"Sloppy. That’s unusual." He looked slightly perturbed. "I hadn’t actually thought this would open."

Calliope looked down and saw fresh footprints carved into the damp soil. "Someone has been here recently. "

He looked down and swore softly. "We’re leaving. Now. "

"Wait, what about his office? What about the ring?"

He shot her a dangerous look. "Not tonight."

James grabbed her hand again and started walking so swiftly she had to run to keep up.

They moved up the street toward the coach, which had moved to the other end. Jenkins looked nervous. "Milord, I have a nasty feeling about tonight."

"So do I, Jenkins, let’s get home."

James tossed Calliope into the carriage and vaulted in after her.

She didn’t mutter a protest. Her senses had started screaming as well.

The coach sped down the street. It wasn’t a great distance to travel to James’s residence and Calliope suddenly wanted to be safely ensconced in his extravagant house.

A screech of hooves grated through the coach’s walls.

A shot rang out, and the carriage careened out of control.

Chapter 14

Calliope grasped air as she was flung toward the coach’s floor. She girded herself for the bruising impact but was caught roughly by James. He pulled her against him and braced them both against the sides of the coach.

He swore fluently and Calliope clutched his arm as they rocketed pell-mell around a corner. It was apparent the animals were running unchecked. Buildings streaked past and shouts echoed in the night. Calliope prayed Jenkins would regain control of the frightened beasts before they neared the theater district.

Her prayers went unanswered. They raced down the Strand and past the Opera House.

A woman’s shrill scream pierced the night. Angry shouts followed.

James tried to open the trapdoor but something was blocking it. Cold ran through Calliope as she realized that Jenkins’s heavy form was probably the culprit.

James opened a box hidden in the squabs and thrust a small gun in her hand, then placed two other pistols on the seat. He yelled over the noise from the wheels and the shouts from pedestrians outside, "They’re loaded. Use the smaller one only if they get close."

Not waiting for a reply, he threw the coach window open and crawled through. She gaped at his retreating backside as the coach lurched precariously.

Calliope held her breath until she knew he had safely reached the driver’s box. Snapping to attention, she repositioned herself, propping her legs against the seat across from her. Calliope heard the horses’ angry snorts as James attempted to get the frightened creatures under control.

She stuck her head out the window to call to him. A pole whirled past and she pulled her head in so fast that she bumped it against the top of the window frame.

How had he climbed out without getting hit?

Being more circumspect, she again peered upward out the window. She detected the slumped-over form of Jenkins. She prayed fervently that he was only slightly injured. Straining a glance behind the coach, Calliope spotted two riders approaching at a fast clip.

Shots rang out again and she whipped her head inside. How many guns did the assailants have?

She tucked the smaller gun in her breeches and picked up one of the other pistols. Keeping a tight grip, she leaned out the window, cocked the hammer and squeezed the trigger. One of the riders ducked but continued to give chase. She fired the other, with the same result. Her ears rang from the report.

Her hands shook as she tried to reload the gun. Under the best of circumstances it required a steady hand to pour the powder down the barrel, but in a wildly swaying vehicle, it was nearly impossible.

The contents jiggled as the carriage tossed on the rutted road. She shoved the powder case toward the muzzle. Powder spilled onto the carriage floor. Muttering in frustration, she tried again. The coach lurched. She pinched her fingers together around the case in a bone-crushing grip. Another carriage jerk caused her cap to slip over her left eye. Hair loosened from its constraints, chunks of curls came tumbling out, further obscuring her view. Calliope elbowed the offending hair back.

A violent pitch caused her bad leg to give out and, losing her precarious balance, she fell against the left side of the coach. Still concentrating on the powder, so close to the hole, she poured it in. Finally. She grabbed a paper wad and a ball and pounded them down the shaft.

Meanwhile, it seemed James had managed to get the old town coach and four horses under some semblance of control and the seat wasn’t wobbling as much. The team continued moving at a breakneck pace, weaving around obstacles and taking sharp turns. She stuck her head out the window, took aim and blindly fired.

The two riders slowed and moved to either side of the street. James circled Trafalgar Square and the coach headed back down Whitehall.

She ducked back into the carriage as they hit a bump in the road. It tossed her to the side and her valuable bag of powder poured uselessly to the floor. Damn, and damn again.

Her only alternative was to join James and see if she could be of assistance. Checking that the small gun was secure in her breeches, she grasped both sides of the window frame and hauled herself halfway out on her backside as she had seen him do. Sitting in the frame, she reached for the top of the carriage and was nearly tossed out as they hit a furrow in the road.

She felt the gun slip from her waistband and grabbed it just in time to keep it from falling to the ground. She sent silent thanks that she had worn breeches, James cursed loudly as Calliope stretched toward the driver’s seat. He reached around to pull her up and over Jenkins like a sack of flour. The horses balked at the loosened reins and Calliope could do nothing but hold on for dear life as James hauled her into the seat.

"What are you doing, woman? Are you trying to kill yourself? Come to think of it, I could kill you myself." He didn’t look her way, but his face was drawn in harsh, intense lines.

"I thought I might help. I know you’re trying to outrun those riders."

"Well, you could have shot them. That would have helped."

"I tried. Three times."

"More times would’ve been helpful. From inside the carriage. I can’t see any way for you to reload up here."

"Uh, yes. You see, that was the crux of the problem-"

A shot rang out over their heads.

"Damn it, get down."

He pushed her to the floor and hunched over the reins as they sped past the Admiralty.

Coming up here hadn’t been her brightest idea.

More shots rang out and she heard a hiss from James. It was lucky the horses were back under control, because he was now holding them with only his right hand. For the second time that night he was covered in red.