Lambert’s hand came around Kitty’s elbow.

“Don’t bother, Kit.” His blue eyes glittered. “Since his wife died, Blackwood’s not the marrying type either.” His grin was cruel.

He enjoyed imagining she was unhappy because he would not marry her. Years ago, ruining her had been entirely about insulting her brothers, whom he despised. But now Kitty knew he simply liked to think she pined for him. Indeed she had pretended gorgeously, allowing him liberties to keep him close, because she believed she needed to see him suffer as she had—first when he refused her marriage, then when he proved to her that she was barren.

She looked back toward the man who had lost his young wife years earlier yet who still remained faithful to her, a rough-hewn man who in the middle of a society crush rescued a serving girl from abuse.

From the shadows the Earl of Blackwood met her regard. A flicker of hardness once more lit the dark warmth of his eyes.

Things were not always what they seemed.

But Kitty already knew that better than anybody.

Chapter 1

London, 1816 Fellow Subjects of Britain, How delinquent is Government if it distributes the sorely depleted Treasury of our Noble Kingdom hither and yon without recourse to prudence, justice, or reason?

Gravely so.

Irresponsibly so.

Villainously so!

As you know, I have made it my crusade to make public all such spendthrift waste. This month I offer yet another example: 14½ Dover Street.

What use has Society of an exclusive gentlemen’s club if no gentlemen are ever seen to pass through its door?—that white-painted panel graced with an intimidating knocker, a Bird of Prey. But the door never opens. Do the exalted members of this club ever use their fashionable clubhouse?

It appears not.

Information has recently come to me through perilous channels I swim for your benefit, Fellow Subjects. It appears that without proper debate Lords has approved by Secret Ballot an allotment to the Home Office designated for this so-called club. And yet for what purpose does the club exist but to pamper the indolent rich for whom such establishments are already Legion? There can be no good in this Rash Expenditure.

I vow to uncover this concealed squandering of our kingdom’s Wealth. I will discover the names of each member of this club, and what business or play passes behind its imposing knocker. Then, dear readers, I will reveal it to you.

—Lady Justice Sir, I regretfully notify you that agents Eagle, Sea Hawk, Raven, and Sparrow have withdrawn from service, termination effective immediately. The Falcon Club, it appears, is disbanded. I of course shall remain until all outstanding cases are settled.

Additionally, I draw your attention to the pamphlet of 10 December 1816, produced by Brittle & Sons, Printers, enclosed. Poor old girl is doomed to disappointment.

Yours, &c., Peregrine


“Thank you, sir.” The lady pressed her trembling fingertips into Leam Blackwood’s palm. “ Thank you.”

In the iron mist of the moonless December night, he lifted her hand and placed the softest kiss upon her knuckles.

“God be wi’ ye, lass.”

Twin fountains of gratitude sparkled on her cheeks.

“You are too good.” She pressed his kerchief to her quivering lips. “ Too good, my lord.” Her lashes fluttered. “If only…”

With a gentle shake of his head and a regretful smile, he handed her into the carriage and closed the door. The vehicle started off, clattering wheels and hooves shrouded by the hush of fog enveloping London’s wee hours.

For a moment, Leam stared after. He released a long breath.

’Twas a night like every other night.

’Twas a night like no other night.

’Twas a bushel of bad poetry, quite like the bad poetry of his life for the past five years. But tonight it would come to an end.

Straightening his shoulders, he buttoned his coat and raked his fingers through the itchy beard. By God, even his dogs didn’t go about so scruffy. It was a sorry day when a man wanted a razor more than a brandy.

“Well, that’s that.” His voice held no trace of Scots, the thick burr of his homeland he’d trained his tongue to suppress as a youth. And yet five years earlier, in service to the crown, he had reclaimed that Scots. Five numb years ago. Quite willingly.

But no more.

“Bella. Hermes.” He snapped his fingers. Two giant shadows emerged from the park opposite.

He’d brought the dogs along tonight to sniff out the woman from a scrap of her clothing provided by her husband. Sight hounds by breeding, they were helpful enough in a pinch. The manager of the seedy hotel in which they had run the woman to ground hadn’t minded the animals, and the agents of the Falcon Club had once again found their quarry. Yet another lost soul.

Of course the pup, Hermes, had stirred up trouble in the hotel kitchen. But Bella hadn’t bothered anyone. She was a good old girl, maistly wonderfu’ contented.

That made one of them.

“Quite sure you wish to give this up, old chap?” The gentleman on the sidewalk behind Leam murmured into the damp cold. From the tone of Wyn Yale’s voice, Leam guessed his expression: a slight smile, narrowed silver eyes. “Must be satisfying to wrap lovely matrons so easily around your little finger.”

“Ladies admire tragic heroes.” Beside Yale, Constance Read’s soft voice lilted with northern music. “And my cousin is very charming, as well as handsome, of course. Just like you, Wyn.”

“You are all kindness, my lady,” Yale replied. “But alas, a Welshman can never best a Scot.

History proves it.”

“Ladies don’t give a fig about history. Especially the young ladies, who like you quite well enough.” She laughed, a ripple of silk that relieved the tension corded about Leam’s lungs.

“The hotel manager’s wife called him a ruffian,” Yale added.

“She was flirting. They all flirt with him. She also called him a tease.”

“They haven’t any idea.” The Welshman’s voice was sly.

No idea whatsoever.

Leam passed a hand over his face again. Four years at Cambridge. Three after that at Edinburgh.

He spoke seven languages, read two more, had traveled three continents, owned a vast Lowlands estate, and was heir to a dukedom possessed of a fortune built on East Indian silks and tea. Yet society imagined him a ruffian and a tease. Because that was the man he showed to the world.

By God, he’d had enough of this. Five years’ worth of enough. And yet in his heart there was a kind of fighting that would not let him sleep.

Good Lord. Shakespearean thoughts in the wake of silly females and bad poetry. Brandy seemed an excellent idea after all.

Leam swiveled on his heels.

“If you two are quite finished, perhaps we might go inside. The night advances and I have elsewhere to be.” He gestured toward the door to the modest town house before which they stood. Like the falcon-shaped knocker, the bronze numbers 14½ above the lintel glistened in the glow of a nearby gas lamplight.

“Where elsewhere?” His cousin Constance, a sparkling beauty who at twenty had already sent a hundred men to their knees in London drawing rooms, lifted azure eyes full of keen curiosity.

“Anywhere but here.” He drew her up the steps.

“Don’t set your hopes on that too securely, old chap. Colin has plans.” Yale pressed the door open and winked at Constance as she passed through.

“Colin can go hang,” Leam muttered.

“I would rather not.” At the parlor threshold, the head agent of the Falcon Club, Viscount Colin Gray, stood as he had any number of nights, calmly awaiting their return from yet another assignment.

The edge of his mouth ticked up ever so slightly. Gray rarely smiled. His was a grave sort of English rectitude, one Leam had admired since their school days. He met Leam’s gaze, his indigo eyes sober.

“But if you wait long enough, my friend, you might get lucky.”

“More likely to be a guillotine than a noose, though. Hm, Colin?” Yale moved directly to the sideboard. The young Welshman’s speech never slurred nor did his gait falter. But Leam had watched the lad drink an entire bottle of brandy since noon.

A brace of candles illumined crystal decanters. Glass in hand, Yale settled into a chair as easily as a boy. But nothing ever looked as it seemed. Leam had learned that years ago.

The dogs padded in, Bella settling on the rug by the fire, her pup greeting Gray, then following him to the hearth.

“How did matters proceed tonight at the hotel?” The viscount leaned against the mantel. “Mr.

Grimm has gone off in the carriage and you are all here, so I must assume you found the princess and that she is now on her way home.”

“To the loving bosom of her anxiously awaiting husband.” Yale smiled slightly.

“Leam flirted with everything in a skirt.” Constance paused at a window, drawing open a drapery to peer out into the darkness.

“Always does. Sets the ladies’ breasts aflutter in sympathy so that they utter every word they ever heard.” Yale sipped his brandy. “Or, always did, rather.”

“He is quite good at it.” In the glow of firelight, Gray’s face was like chiseled marble.

Leam remained on the threshold, eyes half lidded as was his wont even now and here. The habit of years died hard, and he had not yet shaved away the vestiges of his false persona. His costume still clung.

But not for long.

Constance glanced over her shoulder. A sumptuous gold lock dangled along her neck in studied artifice so unlike her actual character. She played a part too. They all did.

As members of the Falcon Club, for five years Leam, Wyn Yale, Colin Gray and their fourth, Jinan Seton, had used their skills to seek out and find missing persons whose retrieval merited a measure of secrecy. For the king. For England. But Leam’s cousin Constance had only entered the game two years ago, when he invited her.

“It is so odd every time,” she said, “seeing them go off like that with Mr. Grimm in the carriage, returning home.” She peered at the viscount. “Colin, how on earth do people find out about us? It’s not as though we advertise in the papers. Do they all know our secret director personally? But then, of course, if that were the case he wouldn’t be very secret, would he? And we might know him too.” Her lips curved sweetly.

“Perhaps if you remain in the Club you might someday,” the viscount replied.

“Oh, you know I could not. Not when Leam, Wyn, and Jinan are all calling it quits.”

Leam studied her. “You needn’t as well, Constance.”

“I shall do as I wish, Leam.”

“Come now, cousins.” Yale waved a hand, brandy swirling in his crystal goblet. “Don’t let’s quarrel. Haven’t yet had enough to drink.”

“They aren’t your cousins, Yale,” came the rejoinder from across the chamber.

The Welshman tilted a black brow and allowed his opinion of the issue to be known to Lord Gray with the barest glitter of silvery eyes.

“I should never have dragged her into this in the first place.” Leam crossed the chamber to his cousin, lowering his voice as he neared. “But at the time I believed you required diversion.” He lifted her hand and gently squeezed her gloved knuckles.

“Oh, don’t.” Constance withdrew her fingers. “You will make me weep with your poet’s eyes. I am quite as susceptible as all those other ladies, you know.”

“Cad,” Lord Gray muttered.

Constance shot him a laughing look. “Weep with affection, Colin. Only slightly greater than the affection I hold for you.”

Lord Gray tilted his head in recognition of the beauty’s gracious condescension.

“You see, Leam? Colin will have your neck now if you cause me to cry.” Her blue eyes twinkled.

“Second that, Blackwood. Never like to see a lady in tears,” mumbled Yale with a sleepy air.

“The lady would not be morose if you weren’t dragging her into retirement with you so abruptly,” Gray commented.

“Tut-tut, old man. Mustn’t scold during our good-bye party.” Yale’s eyes were barely creased open, but that signified little. After working with the Welshman for five years, even Leam did not always know when his friend was truly foxed or merely pretending it.