When Gods Die

When Gods Die Read Free Page A

Book: When Gods Die Read Free
Author: C. S. Harris
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Only how many people do you suppose actually believe the poor sod slit his own throat? From left to right. When he was left-handed.”
    “Cumberland is a dangerous man with a violent temper. No one could deny that. But whatever else you can say about Prinny, he’s nothing like his brother.”
    Jarvis lifted one eyebrow in silent incredulity.
    Again, that faint flush of color showed beneath Portland’s pale skin. “Very well. Your point is taken. But why send for Devlin? He was cleared of all suspicion in those ghastly murders last winter.”
    “Officially,” said Jarvis, turning as his footman appeared in the doorway and bowed.
    “Viscount Devlin, my lord.”
    Jarvis could see him now: a tall, lean young man with dark hair and strange, almost animalistic eyes that reputedly had the power to see in the night with the uncanny penetration of a cat. Jarvis knew a moment of quiet satisfaction. He’d half expected Devlin not to come. He was a most unpredictable man, this Viscount; wild and dangerous and utterly, intriguingly brilliant.
    Jarvis cast a meaningful glance at the Home Secretary. “If you will excuse us, Lord Portland?”
    Portland hesitated, as if tempted to insist he stay. Then he bowed and said curtly, “Of course.”
    He strode toward the door, his lips pressed together into a thin line. But Jarvis caught the unexpected, speculative gleam in the man’s eyes before he nodded his head and said curtly, “Lord Devlin.”

Chapter 4
     
    “D o come in, my lord,” said Jarvis, sweeping one arm through the air in an expansive gesture. He’d been blessed with a charming smile that was both disarming and often amazingly effective, and he used that smile now as the Viscount paused just inside the chamber’s doorway. “You’re surprised, doubtless, by the invitation. If I remember correctly, the last time we met, you held a gun to my head. And abducted my daughter.”
    Devlin stood very still, his face inscrutable. “I trust she suffered no lasting ill effects.”
    “Hero? Hardly. The maid, however, has never been the same since.” Lifting the crystal decanter from its tray, Jarvis held it aloft. “Brandy?”
    Devlin’s eyes narrowed. He had inhuman eyes, this young Viscount: as yellow and feral as a wolf’s. “I think we can dispense with the civilities.”
    Jarvis set aside the decanter. “Very well, then. Let’s not skirt around the issue. We’ve asked you here because the Regent needs your help.”
    “My help.”
    “That’s right. He’d like you to discover exactly what happened in the Pavilion tonight.”
    The Viscount laughed, his amusement short and sharp and faintly bitter.
    Jarvis kept his voice pleasant. “It’s not our intention to see you framed for this murder, if that’s what you fear.”
    “How reassuring. Mind you, it would be rather difficult, given that I never left the music room this evening.”
    “Yet there are those who whisper that your presence at tonight’s soiree was…shall we say, suggestive?”
    “Ah, I see. It’s in my own best interest to find this killer—is that what you’re saying?”
    “Something like that.”
    The Viscount wandered the room, pausing for a moment to inspect one of the mythical creatures rendered in gold on the wall cloth. “If I cared what people thought of me, I might be tempted,” he said without looking around. “Fortunately, I don’t.”
    Jarvis smoothly shifted tactics, the smile fading, his voice becoming stentorian and grave. “I fear this murder comes at a critical moment in our nation’s history. Our armies are not doing as well as one might wish on the Peninsula, and there are distressing signs that this year’s harvest may fail. The people are restless. Have you any idea what a scandal of this nature might do to the country?”
    Devlin swung around, a disconcerting gleam in his strange yellow eyes. “I certainly have some personal knowledge of what it might do to Prinny’s already faltering popularity.”
    Reaching

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