Firelight

chapter Twenty

Ian Mckinnon entertained his whore for half the night.

Three floors below, in the quiet dark of Mckinnon’s library, Archer pulled his watch from his pocket. Nearly two in the morning. He rolled his eyes and snapped the watch shut. It galled him to wait. In his current mood, he wanted to kill anyone lucky enough to get sexual satisfaction. Most especially McKinnon.

But surprise was key when invading Mckinnon’s lair. As it was, Rossberry had slid away upon learning of Archer’s interest. Now the bulk of Mckinnon’s staff had disappeared overnight, either having been let go or sent on elsewhere, disbanding with the same ghostly efficiency as Rossberry’s staff. Archer could ill afford to let Mckinnon slip through his fingers. Not after what he’d seen tonight—his golden ring upon the man’s finger, glinting in the light. So real it was a shock to see it. It had taken all of his control not to rip it from Mckinnon’s hand then and there. But Miranda would have seen and asked questions.

A loud thump and a disjointed groan came from above, drawing Archer’s gaze to the carved flower medallion upon the ceiling. If the cur didn’t finish soon, he’d drag him from his bed. Archer finished his single malt with an impatient swallow. At least the man stocked a proper bar.

Laughter rang out, the whore’s nasal titters tempered by Mckinnon’s deep rumble. Archer suppressed an oath. Even when he’d been whole, he hadn’t been able to bring himself to pay for pleasure. The pair scampered drunkenly down the last set of stairs, coming into view as they paused in the hall. Light from the flickering wall sconces fell upon the woman, and the lingering taste of peaty scotch turned sour in Archer’s mouth. Ginger-haired, green-eyed, and uncommonly tall, she possessed nauseatingly obvious qualifications for Mckinnon’s selection. Her fine clothes and good skin marked her as quality goods. Archer repressed a snort. One might as well try to pass off chalk-water for cream.

Archer waited in silence while Mckinnon paid his doxy and sent her on her way with a loud slap to her rump. Humming a satisfied tune, he sauntered into the library moments later, headed for the drinks table.

“A rather pathetic imitation for the real thing,” Archer said, shattering the peaceful silence.

Mckinnon started, his fine slippers scuffing on the parquet. A low growl sounded in his throat as he whipped around, puzzlement over how he had missed an intruder knitting his brows.

Yellow flashed in Mckinnon’s blue eyes as Archer lit the lamp.

“Even for you, Mckinnon.”

Realization came quickly to Mckinnon. “Of course,” he said lightly. “You smell like nothing.” He straightened his dressing gown and helped himself to a tumbler of scotch. His throat bobbed against his open collar as he swallowed it down in one gulp. The glass landed hard upon the wood. The smoky lamplight cast shadows over Mckinnon’s lean features as he glanced at Archer. “Well, perhaps like frozen death.”

Archer smiled blandly. “And you smell like wet fur.”

Mckinnon laughed. “Aye, well.” His eyes gleamed in the dull lamplight. “You haven’t come for my irresistible charms, I see. Then what? Eavesdropping give you a cheap thrill? I’d have to guess you’re still repressed by that juvenile fear of bedding whores.”

“Is that what you call it?” Archer flashed his teeth. “Here I thought it was an aversion to paying someone to want me. I’ll get my pleasure for free, thanks.”

Mckinnon grinned. “But are you? I suspect your presence here rather screams your fear of where your wife’s affections lie.”

Archer smoothed a wrinkle in his trousers, his hand shaking but a little. He was fairly certain where her affections lay. The thought of it coursed hot through his blood.

The man’s keen eyes took in what was certainly smugness dwelling on Archer’s lips, and he snorted in disgust. “I may be sick.”

“I’d mind your shoes, then.”

Mckinnon displayed a set of sharp canines in a parody of a smile. “Are you going to tell her you’re responsible for this? For all of them?”

Archer’s hands settled comfortably in his lap. “For Rossberry too, I suppose.”

A low growl, little more than a rumble, came from Mckinnon’s throat.

Archer forced a laugh he did not feel. “My, but you are an impressionable pup. More so than my wife.”

Mckinnon’s silky voice drifted across the dark. “But she’s thinking about things now?” His eyes crinkled in mirth. “Isn’t she?”

Archer simply stared, his heart thundering in his ears, the urge to crack Mckinnon’s spine making his fists clench.

Mckinnon’s smile faltered, but he straightened with bravado. Glass clinked as he fiddled with the crystal stopper on a decanter. “Why are you here then?”

Feeding on Mckinnon’s disquiet, Archer regarded him for a minute more and then spoke. “The ring.”

A dark brow quirked as Mckinnon glanced down at his hand and the slash of gold upon it. “Foolish to take my gloves off, wasn’t it?” He flashed his teeth. “I’d become too comfortable, I suppose.”

Confident or not, base jealousy pushed through Archer’s insides. Mckinnon’s smile grew. He poured himself another drink. The faint movement brought the musky tang of sex into the air. Archer breathed through his mouth and waited.

“You know,” said Mckinnon finally, “I don’t believe I shall part with the ring. It was a gift from my father, you see. And it holds such fond memories of seeing you suffer, and all that.”

It wouldn’t take much to snap the mutt’s neck.

Unaware of the danger, Mckinnon turned and leaned a hip upon the console. “I am, however, willing to consider a trade. A dip in your wife’s luscious—”

Mckinnon flew across the room, the blow from Archer’s fist slamming him into the wall, in a spray of plaster and flopping limbs. A painting of the Thames teetered on the wall above him as he fell in a heap on the floor. Mckinnon sucked in a ragged breath and then launched upward.

The impact caught Archer around the middle as Mckinnon tackled him. They fell back with a thud, sliding across the floor to crash into a writing desk. Wood splintered, paper fell like leaves about them. Archer felt the sharp prick of a broken table leg against his back and then he spun, throwing Mckinnon off him in one move. The man tumbled several feet then leapt up, just as Archer did.

“You’re stronger now,” Mckinnon observed with a breathless laugh. Archer rather had the same thought about Mckinnon but kept it to himself. Blood colored Mckinnon’s teeth red as he snarled and came at Archer again.

Archer slid past, catching Mckinnon’s outstretched arm. He swung the man around and tossed him like a rag into the far wall. Mckinnon collided with a curio cabinet in an explosion of glass.

“Faster too,” retorted Archer as shards of glass pinged upon the floor. He straightened his lapels, and when Mckinnon rushed him, he swung low, catching the man in the gut. Mckinnon roared and whirled round, his fist connecting with surprising force to Archer’s temple. Archer saw stars. He blinked them back and lashed out, hearing the satisfying crunch of bone as his fist sunk into Mckinnon’s face.

Mckinnon fell like a broken mainmast. Archer pressed his foot into his neck to keep him from rising. “I think you’ve had enough, young pup.”

Mckinnon’s eyes narrowed to blue slits. “Bastard.” He spat, blood gushing from his skewed nose and split lip. “If the moon was brighter…”

Archer pressed down. “Unfortunately for you, it isn’t.”

Mckinnon flailed against him. His blows upon Archer’s legs grew weak and ineffective. When he took on a bluish hue and blood began to bubble from his nose like froth, Archer eased his step a fraction.

“Now,” Archer said, bending over the snarling, coughing man, “you’ve begun to bore me.” He reached down and yanked the ring from Mckinnon’s finger, far more cruelly than necessary, then stepped away.

Mckinnon wheezed and rubbed his neck tenderly. “Ye bloody frozen bastard.” He hauled himself to sitting and spat a large glob of something foul upon the floor, but made no move to get up. He knew better than to challenge Archer now. “Ye best start runnin’ now. The moment that moon waxes…”

“Yes, I’ve heard it all before.” Archer strolled toward the door, stepping lightly over broken bits of a chair. “From your father.”

“Cocksucker.”

Archer stopped and glanced at him. Already the blood was easing its flow from Mckinnon’s nose, the puffed flesh about the man’s face regaining its natural color.

“Careful,” Archer said. “You wouldn’t want that to heal before you reset it.”

Mckinnon let lose a volley of curses as he set his nose straight with nary a flinch. Archer laughed lightly but his humor faded as he clutched the ring in his palm. “Stay away from her, Ian.”

He was almost through the door when Mckinnon’s call stopped him.

“Benjamin.”

He did not turn, but waited.

“Why did you bring her into this nightmare?”

Guilt slashed at Archer, unexpected and raw. He closed his eyes for a brief moment. “Asks the man who’d take her from me if he could.”

Mckinnon made a bleak sound. “I suppose I understand you better than I thought.”

Archer’s head suddenly felt too heavy to hold up. “Then we’ve come full circle, you and I.”

“Aye, and yet damn if ye aren’t making the same fool mistakes ye’ve witnessed in me,” Mckinnon retorted sharply, the misery in his voice bringing forth the Scottish accent he tried so hard to eradicate. “If ye have any love for her, show her what you are before it’s too late for her to flee.”





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