“Only if you promise me that such an effort will be greatly rewarded upstairs in your bedroom later this evening,” he murmured as he waggled his eyebrows with exaggerated fervor.
“I shall look forward to it,” Mary told him with a playful smile, while a slow heat made its way toward her cheeks.
“Excellent,” he said. He leaned back against his chair and folded his hands patiently in his lap. “Then by all means tell me. What is on your mind?”
She told Ryan about her conversation with her uncle and how she’d assured him that she’d check the journals for a way in which to treat his sarcoma. “I didn’t get a chance to do it yet, so perhaps we could do it together and save some time. I know that my father mentioned a cancer patient in there somewhere, a woman who was treated by a Parisian surgeon, I believe. As far as I recall, her situation was quite different from what my uncle is now faced with, but maybe we can try to apply a similar cure.”
Ryan looked at her skeptically. “That isn’t all, though, is it? Something else is bothering you; I can tell.”
“Well, with everything that has happened so far, I just don’t feel very comfortable about this man whom I really do not know showing up out of nowhere and declaring to be my long-lost uncle. He mentioned the journals a couple of times and has asked me to see them under the pretext that he wants to understand his brother’s reasons for leaving, and. . .Oh, I do not know, something about it just doesn’t feel right.”
“Well, I am quite sure that he is who he claims to be Mary, or Percy would not have brought him all the way out here. I can guarantee that a thorough background check was done to make sure that he is not an imposter, especially because of everything that has happened.
“However, it is not for me to say if he is somehow involved in the threats against you. I suppose it might make sense that a man who is as sick as he is would want to get his hands on your father’s journals, where he might discover other possible treatment options that physicians in this country are otherwise ignorant of.” Ryan paused for a moment, as if considering the possibility of Alistair Croyden’s being the very culprit they’d been seeking. “Of course, we would need something more solid to go on than just a hunch, but I have to admit that he would also have a compelling reason to resent both you and your father.”
Mary stared at Ryan, her brow furrowing into a deep frown. “Because of the inheritance?”
“Well, of course, Mary. Your grandfather snubbed Mr. Croyden in the worst possible way. When your father left, declaring he wanted nothing more to do with the family, your grandfather still left everything to him, even though your uncle stuck around, waiting and hoping, I would imagine, that just a small bit of your grandfather’s fortune might go to him. But it did not. Your father was your grandfather’s favorite, and your grandfather could not possibly have made that fact any clearer. It would be strange if Mr. Croyden did not hold some sort of grudge against him—and now you.”
Mary leaned back against her chair. She was silent as she considered everything Ryan had said. “What should I do?” she finally asked.
“I think you should do what you can to help him with his sarcoma. Just be cautious; act under the assumption that he cannot be trusted. After all, we know very little about him aside from what he has told you.”
“Very well then,” Mary agreed, rising to her feet. Ryan got up as well and came toward her, offering her his arm. “I will examine him in the morning once I have gone over my father’s notes.” Turning her head to gaze out of the tall windows that surrounded them, Mary caught her breath. “Good heavens, Ryan, it is snowing!”
Sure enough, large plump flakes were drifting lazily toward the ground. “And this in the middle of July,” Ryan muttered, sounding just as astonished as Mary. Wrapping one arm about her shoulders, they remained there for a long while, quietly watching the ground vanish beneath a smooth blanket of white.
The following morning, Mary got up early, even though she’d sat up late trying to devise a plan by which to help her uncle. The method that her father had suggested in his notes would require a bit of planning if they were to carry it out successfully, but she did believe that it might be possible.
“Mr. Croyden,” she said as she took a seat across from her father’s brother in the library, “my father did make an entry in one of his journals that just might be of use to us.”
Mr. Croyden looked at her expectantly, almost unable to contain his enthusiasm. He was clearly eager to find out what Mary had in mind.
“He mentions a physician in Paris who, roughly forty years ago, cured a woman of cancer by applying a septic dressing. I cannot guarantee that such a treatment will work for you, but I do believe that it is worth a try.”
Mr. Croyden looked mildly perplexed. “I do not even understand why something like that might work,” he said.
“Well, I suppose that the infection brought on by the dressing might have somehow stimulated the woman’s immune system.” Mary paused for a moment as she regarded her uncle quite thoughtfully. “You have to understand that this woman went through many bouts of severe fever as a result of this, before she was finally cured.”
“But she was cured?” Mr. Croyden asked hopefully. “Completely?”
Mary nodded. “Yes,” she said. “It appears so.”
“Excellent,” Mr. Croyden remarked with a satisfied nod. “I must say that I am very pleased with your efforts.”
“Well, don’t thank me just yet; we still have a long way ahead of us. I shall need to examine you first, as I mentioned to you before, but I do think that—”
Mr. Croyden grinned as he waved his hands dismissively. “There will be no need for that,” he said, cutting her off. “While I am immensely grateful for your efforts, I am not entirely sure that I would be very comfortable with a. . .ahem. . .a woman taking a peek at me.”
Mary gaped at her uncle as if he were a complete lunatic. “I see,” she told him drily as she got up and walked across to the window. The ground was still white from last night’s snow. “You didn’t seem to mind it in the slightest when I mentioned it yesterday.”
“Please don’t take offense. This is a delicate matter for me, and I. . .well, I am just not comfortable with a young woman such as yourself...” He looked at her pleadingly. “I was hoping that I might be able to borrow the journal that mentions this particular case so that I can show it to my physician in London. I will give you full credit, of course, and—”
Mary turned to him with frost in her eyes. “No,” she told him sharply.
“No?” Her uncle spread his hands in exasperation. “But surely you would not deny a dying man the means by which to recover.”
“You are right. I will not. But if you want to make use of the information my father gave me, then you will have to put your welfare into my hands. If not, you are welcome to return to your London physician and tell him everything that I have just told you. But the journals will remain here with me.”
Mr. Croyden narrowed his eyes as he met her gaze. “You are a stubborn woman, Lady Steepleton,” he told her coolly, but a second later a warm smile creased the corners of his eyes. It was enough to strengthen Mary’s resolve. There was something about this man that unnerved her.
“Never mind,” he told her gently, his demeanor completely changed from that which he’d shown her a moment earlier. “I completely understand. No hard feelings, ay? Come, let us join the others in the parlor. I believe the men are having a game of faro, and I would love to see how they are getting on.”
“Yes, of course,” Mary replied, though somewhat brusquely. She regretted the way in which she’d handled the situation, particularly since Mr. Croyden was her only relative. It hadn’t been her intention to tell him that she didn’t trust him, yet that was precisely what had happened anyway. And now he’d probably resent her forever.
What could she do, though, short of letting him take her father’s journals with him to London, and that was out of the question. Those journals were clearly very important to somebody other than her. She had no intention of letting them out of her sight until that little mystery had been solved. With a heavy heart, she accepted the arm that her uncle offered her and allowed him to lead her down the hall and toward the parlor.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Mary awoke with a start that night. Sitting bolt upright in bed, she glanced steadily around the shadowy room. Slowly, her eyes adjusted to the faint outlines of the furniture that stood tucked away in the darkness. Everything seemed perfectly still, save for the faint ticking of the clock that sat upon the chest of drawers. Exhaling a breath of air, she was just about to settle back down again when a slight creaking caught her ears. Stiffening, she turned her head toward the bedroom door. She hadn’t noticed it before, but now that she focused her eyes on that spot, she was able to see that the door stood slightly ajar. Another creak sounded, followed by the low thud of footsteps along the hallway runner.
With her heart thumping furiously in her chest, she leaped out of bed, crouching onto her knees to retrieve the box she’d hidden underneath it earlier that evening. Her fingers fumbled helplessly around the dusty space, unwilling to accept that the box was no longer there. It was gone. All of her father’s work—her most precious possession—had been stolen.
She jumped to her feet, flinging her robe over her shoulders and casting a quick glance at the panel door that led to Ryan’s room. There was no time to lose on waking him. Whoever had taken her father’s journals would already be well on their way. She had to hurry.
Grabbing the pistol that Alexandra had given her, she raced out of the room in her bare feet, her robe and nightgown billowing out behind her in the chilly hallway as she ran.
At the sound of neighing, she quickened her pace, bounding down the stairs in a desperate attempt to catch the thief before he got away. She was almost there. Her hand reached out to grasp the handle of the large front door. It swung open quickly on a gust of wind, pulling her along with it and swirling her flimsy garments about her legs while her hair whipped across her face. Steadying herself, she looked out into the night, spotting the horse, just as a hand clad in a black leather glove pressed itself over her mouth and pulled her forcefully against the frame of a sturdy figure.
“You should have stayed in bed, Lady Steepleton,” a thick voice told her leeringly. “It is not safe for a woman such as yourself to be running about at this hour, unchaperoned.”
A menacing laugh erupted from somewhere deep within the stranger’s chest as his free arm snaked its way around her waist. Mary struggled against him, but he was stronger than her and held her in a firm grip that rendered her desperate attempts at escape completely useless. “The more you fight me, the more likely I shall be to lose my patience and serve you the same fate as your father. I must say, nothing has ever given me more pleasure than the sound of his neck snapping like a twig. And just so you know, my orders are to acquire his journals at all cost.”