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Good manners won.

“Lord Devlin,” she said, graciously inclining her head, although the agitation of her breathing was obvious in the rapid rise and fall of her shoulders.

“Walk with me a ways, Lady Peter?” Sebastian suggested.

She threw a quick, uncertain glance toward the two little boys and their attendant nursemaid.

“We won’t go far. I’m told you knew Damion Pelletan as a child, in Paris.”

“I did, yes.” The native French inflections were still a soft purr in her gently modulated voice. “We grew up next door to each other. But. . that was years ago. How could those days possibly have anything to do with Damion’s death?”

“I don’t know that they do. At the moment, I’m simply attempting to find out anything that might help explain what happened to him.”

She turned to walk with him along the graveled path, the flounced hem of her walking dress brushing the clipped rosemary hedge that grew beside it. “What would you like to know?”

“When did you last see Dr. Pelletan?”

She hesitated a moment too long, and he had the distinct impression she was tempted to deny having seen Pelletan recently at all.

Sebastian said, “Your husband told me he saw Dr. Pelletan a week or so ago. I assume you did, as well?”

“Yes. As I said, we were old friends. He contacted me shortly after he arrived in London, and Lord Peter invited him to dinner one evening.”

“When was this?”

“As my husband said: a week or so ago.”

“And that was the only time you saw him?”

“No. He paid us several afternoon visits as well.”

Sebastian noted her emphasis of the word “us” but decided not to press it. “Did he tell you why he was here, in London?”

She cast him a hooded sideways glance, obviously hesitant to betray her childhood friend’s confidences, even after his death. “Do you know?” she asked.

“About the delegation? Yes.”

She nodded, a soft breath of relief escaping her parted lips. “I don’t want you to think Damion told me about the peace initiatives himself, because he did not. But my father knew Harmond Vaundreuil, in Paris. He has always been Bonaparte’s creature. So when I heard Damion was here with Vaundreuil. .” She shrugged. “It was supposed to be a secret, but the truth is often not difficult to guess.”

“Why was Pelletan included in the delegation?”

“Vaundreuil has a delicate heart. He worries obsessively about his health, fretting over each and every lump and pain, and is in constant need of reassurance. They thought it best that he travel with his own physician. And then of course there is Vaundreuil’s daughter.”

“Madeline, isn’t it?”

“Yes. You know about her?”

Sebastian shook his head.

“She was married to a young cavalry captain, Francois Quesnel. He was killed last December, in Spain, leaving her with child.”

“Ah,” said Sebastian.

They turned to walk back toward the Lodge, their gazes on the two boys, who had lost interest in the ball and now appeared to be vying to see who could hop the farthest on one foot, their shouts and laughter echoing across the park. Unlike his sister, Noel Durant was surprisingly fair headed. But he had his sister’s heart-shaped face and large green eyes.

Sebastian said, “How old is your brother?”

She gave a soft smile. “He is eight.”

“He lives with you?”

“He does, yes. Our mother died less than a year after his birth-not long before our father.”

“I’m sorry. That must have been very difficult for you, to be left alone in a strange country.”

“It was difficult, yes. But Lord Peter and I were married by then.”

She had been married many years, yet had conceived no children of her own. And Sebastian found himself thinking of another childless Frenchwoman, likewise living in exile in England.

He said, “I understand Damion Pelletan’s father is also a physician.”

“He is, yes.”

“I’m told he was involved in some way with the French royal family, when they were in the Temple Prison. Do you know anything about that?”

He watched in fascination as the color drained from her cheeks, her voice ragged as she said, “You don’t know?”

“Know what?”

“Damion’s father-Philippe-Jean Pelletan-was asked by the National Convention to treat the young Dauphin.”

“The son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette?”

“Yes.”

“Dauphin de France” was the title traditionally given to the heir apparent to the French throne. Few people today could recall the actual name of Marie-Therese’s tragic little brother; most remembered him simply as “the Lost Dauphin.” He was called “lost” not so much because of his early death as because considerable mystery surrounded his ultimate fate. Thrown into prison in 1792 with his parents, his aunt Elisabeth, and his sister Marie-Therese, he was said to have died alone in a cold, dark cell. But within days of the announcement of his death, rumors were already flying-fantastic tales of substitutions and imposters and miraculous escapes.

“He was just ten years old at the time,” said Lady Peter, nodding to her brother, who was now examining the gravel of the walkway with the intensity of a lapidary studying a new array of specimens. “Not much older than Noel is now.”

“When was this?”

“Sometime in 1795. Late May or perhaps early June; I don’t recall precisely.”

“And?”

“The boy was very ill. By that time he had been in prison for more than two years, and he had been treated abominably.” She shook her head, her lips pressed tightly together. “Half-starved, beaten, left to lie in his own filth in a dark cell. Damion’s father did what he could, but it was too late. Just a few days later, the Prince died.”

“Did the elder Dr. Pelletan see Marie-Therese at that time, as well?”

“I don’t know. But I do know that after the Dauphin’s death, Philippe-Jean Pelletan was brought back to the Temple and asked to perform an autopsy on the boy’s body.”

“And did he?”

“Yes.”

Sebastian stared off across the park, a gust of wind sending dry leaves scuttling down the path before them. The skin of his face felt suddenly cold and uncomfortably tight.

“But surely-” She broke off, then tried again. “Surely you don’t think that events from so long ago could have something to do with Damion’s death?”

“Probably not,” he said, to reassure her more than anything else. “When you saw Damion Pelletan last week, how did he seem?”

“What do you mean?”

“I have the impression that relations between the various members of the delegation are not exactly what you might call harmonious.”

A faint gleam of amusement lit up her soft eyes. “No. But then, it’s not surprising, is it? They were all chosen to spy on each other.”

“Oh?”

“Harmond Vaundreuil might be Bonaparte’s tool, but that does not mean the Emperor trusts him. Napoleon trusts no one, especially now. You know of the conspiracy to overthrow him, last December?”

Sebastian nodded.

“The colonel who is with them-Foucher-was the Emperor’s selection, not Vaundreuil’s.”

“And the clerk?”

“Camille Bondurant is not nearly as meek-mannered or self-effacing as he would appear. I remember Damion saying once that if Bondurant had been born two hundred years earlier, in Spain, he’d have enjoyed a brilliant career as a torturer for the Inquisition.”

“And Damion Pelletan himself? Why was he selected?”

“Damion is the only one who was Harmond Vaundreuil’s personal choice. He was here as a physician; he had no role in the negotiations.”

“Yet he agreed to come. Do you know why?”

“Lord Peter asked him that. Damion only smiled and said it’s not often a man is offered the opportunity to be a part of history.”

A coal wagon rolled down the street, heavily laden and pulled by a team of shires leaning into their collars, their breath misting white in the cold air.

Sebastian said, “Did Damion ever serve in the French army as a doctor?”