“Oh my,” the other woman said suddenly, “now where’s he going?”
Marguerite turned and saw Shane stalking across the room with the heavy tread of a man bent on mayhem. Oh, hell. I knew everything was going too well. She followed his gaze and found that Baron Maltrevor had cornered Wren and was breathing heavily in her direction.
People got out of the way of a man in armor. They did not get out of the way of Marguerite, but she was a great deal closer. She slid between the Baron and his victim and said, with feigned delight,
“Why, Baron Maltrevor! You come to my party and don’t even greet your host?”
Maltrevor turned, startled. His eyes focused on her, dropped immediately to her cleavage, and stuck there. “Marguerite! My dear, how long has it been?”
“Far too long,” said Marguerite warmly. “Three years, at least. I’m so pleased that you could make time for my little event.”
“I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”
Wren mouthed thank you over Maltrevor’s shoulder and slipped away. Marguerite hooked her arm through the Baron’s and positioned herself between him and Shane. Shane stopped. Marguerite shot him a quelling look, then turned her attention back to Maltrevor. “Now, you must tell me exactly what you think of these new scents. I know that a man of your sophistication will know which is most suitable for a lady.”
“Oh, certainly. And perhaps someday soon, you could give me your opinion on the most marvelous little clockwork baubles I’ve been collecting…” The Baron closed his hand over hers, still talking, and rubbed it in what he probably thought was an erotic fashion. Maltrevor was lecherous to the core, and while Marguerite knew several extremely charming lechers, he was not among them. Unfortunately he was also wealthy and well-connected, and she was at pains to cultivate his goodwill. At least this is a problem that I know how to handle. She steered the man toward the closest perfumes, scattering light flirtations like caltrops around him. When she was finally able to disentangle herself, her arm was damp where he’d been clasping it.
She kept an eye on the Baron for the rest of the evening. She only had to intervene once, and then, to her eternal gratitude, Fenella wandered into his orbit and distracted him with a discussion of the trade routes that passed through the Maltrevor lands. Marguerite made a mental note to give her a very, very good deal on the perfume order.
Finally, mercifully, it was over. She thanked the few stragglers as they left—Maltrevor breathed heavily in her ear and she manufactured a giggle—and then there was no one left but the servants that she hired to serve wine and clean up. Marguerite made her way swiftly between them, pressing coins into hands and gratitude into words, and finally reached the doorway where Shane waited.
“Are you as tired as I am?” she asked, as he fell into step beside her.
“Likely not. I only stood there, I was not required to talk.”
“There’s that.” She rolled her shoulders. “It went well, anyway.”
His expression soured. “You should have let me throw Maltrevor out on his ear.”
“That would have caused an incident. We are trying to avoid incidents.”
“He deserved it.”
“I’m sure he did, but we’re here for a very specific reason, and that reason does not involve policing the behavior of lecherous nobles.”
“I am willing to expand the scope of our mission,” he said, absolutely deadpan.
Marguerite narrowed her eyes. I still can’t always tell when he’s joking. Dammit.
“We’ll come back next year and make a point of it,” she promised. He inclined his head.
They reached their rooms and Marguerite was very glad when the door closed behind them. She let her shoulders sag and yanked off her shoes. “Oof.”
“Tell me about it,” said Wren, who was lounging barefoot in front of the fire. “I haven’t had blisters like this since my first forced march.”
“Are you all right?” Marguerite asked, collapsing into a chair. “Apart from the blisters, I mean.”
“I’m fine,” Wren said. “The perfume gave me something to talk about, even if I was mostly just gushing that my vassal was a genius.”
“Good. I was a little worried when Maltrevor cornered you.”
“Oh, he tried to grab my ass,” said Wren cheerfully.
Shane, who had been sitting, stood up again. Marguerite groaned and put her hand over her eyes.
“Sit down, brother. I said tried. He got a very nice handful of tablecloth for his pains. Then he just panted on me for a while.” Wren rolled her eyes. “I don’t know why, there were plenty of other women there.”
“Wrong place at the wrong time,” said Marguerite. “It was nothing you did.” Shane was still looking murderous. She and Wren shared a look.
“Did you learn stuff?” asked Wren, clearly trying to change the subject. “I mean, useful stuff?”
“I did not magically learn the location of our artificer, but I did rule out a few people as being involved with the Sail.” Marguerite grimaced. “Which is extremely useful, in that it lets us
concentrate our efforts, but is not as satisfying as providing an actual target. Still, it helps to narrow things down.”
Wren sighed. “I wish Ian had been able to come.”
“Ian?”
“The man I…err…met. It would be nice if you could meet him too.”
“Hmmm. I don’t know anyone here named Ian…” And then, when Wren looked suddenly worried,
“No, that’s good, that means I don’t know anything bad about him.”
Shane muttered something that neither of them could make out. Marguerite thought that was probably for the best.
“Right,” said Wren, getting up. “I just waited up until you got in to make sure that I didn’t need to search the halls for your bodies. Night, all.”
Marguerite leaned back in the chair with a sigh. Now that her feet hurt less, her scalp was beginning to complain. She cursed the fashion that had turned against hats in the last few years. She’d liked hats. They covered a multitude of sins in the hair department.
She began pulling out combs. Shane watched in silence, then finally said, “No click, then?”
“No click.” She sighed heavily and yanked a comb out with a bit more force than necessary. It came out, trailing several dark strands.
“Perhaps it’s still too early,” he offered.
“Probably. I was hoping, though.” More than I’m willing to admit, actually. In her heart of hearts, she’d been hoping to swoop in, have the critical information fall into her lap, and go out after the artificer while the Sail was still trying to figure out if she was the person from the wanted posters.
The longer it took, the more danger that the operatives at Court would actually communicate with one of the branches of the Sail that wanted her dead. Not to mention the chance that they’ll locate the artificer and have them quietly shoved off a cliff, which would be extremely detrimental to both their health and my plans.
One of the combs didn’t want to come out. She pulled harder on it, annoyed.