Read His Lordship Possessed Online
Authors: Lynn Viehl
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Science Fiction, #Urban, #Steampunk
Feathersound. Yes, I know you own it. To save my life,
you’ll swallow a spirit stone, Walsh will kill himself, and
your body will be possessed by Zarath. Th e warlord needs
your mind power to remove the fi nal obstacles and set off
the dreamstones.”
He stared at me. “You’ve never in your life believed
in magic.”
“Th at reminds me.” I smiled. “Your current suspicions
about me are correct. I am a spell-breaker, Lucien. Th at’s
why your magic has no eff ect on me.” I didn’t have to
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tell him that his spiritborn gift of enchantment worked
extremely well; that little detail could remain between me
and the future Dredmore.
He came to me and jerked me to my feet. “If what
you say isn’t some bizarre fancy you’ve dreamed up to
confound me, and by some impossibly wild chance you
have returned from the future, then why didn’t you stop
the Reapers while you were there?”
“I did.” I rested my hand against his chest. “Just before
Zarath cast his spell over the city, I drove an iron spike
through his heart and killed him.” I looked up at him and
let him see everything I felt. “Which was, coincidentally,
your heart.”
“You
killed
me.”
I nodded. “Before you surrendered your body to
Zarath, you made me promise that I would. I didn’t enjoy
it as much as I expected. Really a lot of blood.”
His hands fell away. “Now I do believe you.”
“Excellent.” I turned my head. “Bring the carriage
round, Connell.” I saw the surprise on the servant’s face
before I said, “Your master and I are going to call on
Lord and Lady Walsh.”
Dredmore said very little as we rode to the Hill. I pulled
up the shade so I could see the mansions glittering in the
sunlight once again. While I would never care for the
ton’s lofty community, seeing it burnt to the ground had
not been an improvement.
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“Do you mean to expose Walsh in front of his family?”
Dredmore asked.
“Not at all.” As the carriage stopped, I reached up and
felt for my pendant. “We will speak to him privately.”
He frowned. “If he is under Reaper control, he will
deny every charge, and then use his infl uence to destroy
my credibility and your life.”
“Not this time.” I reached out and patted the back of
his hand. When he seized my wrist, I didn’t pull away.
“We’ve arrived. Don’t change your mind now.”
He held on to me. “You haven’t told me everything
about the future, have you?”
“What, and spoil the surprise?” I smiled as Connell
opened the door. “Where would be the fun in that?”
Th e Walshes’ forbidding old butler came directly to
answer the door, doubtless astonished by the prospect of
anyone calling at such an unseemly, early hour.
“Lord Dredmore and Miss Kittredge to see Lord
Walsh,” I told the old winge before he could open his
mouth. “On quite urgent business.”
Th e butler reared back, the skin surrounding his nose
drawing up as he ignored me and addressed Dredmore.
“Th e master is not receiving, milord.”
Dredmore brushed past him. “He will see me now.”
“It’s a terribly private family matter,” I told the
outraged butler as I followed suit. “We’ll wait for him in
his study.”
It took Lord Walsh less than three minutes to stalk
into the room and slam the doors behind him. Th ere was
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egg yolk on his chin and he still wore his morning jacket
and what looked like fur-lined bed slippers. “Lucien.
Good God, man, what is the meaning of this?”
“Your wife came to see me this morning, Lord
Walsh.” I waited for him to lower himself to notice me.
“She believes your deceased fi rst wife has cast a spell on
her. But as it turns out, you’re the one who has been
bespelled.”
Th e fi rst tinge of purple bloomed in his fl orid cheeks.
“How dare you—”
“With very little trepidation, actually.” I closed the
distance between us and lifted my skirts. “But I do
apologize in advance for my actions.”
I kicked him in the groin with as much force as I could
muster, and stepped back as he shrieked and dropped to
the carpet. He didn’t vomit, however, which annoyed me.
“I see you’re going to be diffi cult. Lucien, please hold his head for a moment.”
Dredmore came up from behind and clapped his
hands over Walsh’s ears.
“Th ank you.” I grabbed the man’s chin and inserted
two of my fi ngers into his mouth, pushing them back
as far as I could until he gagged. “Watch your boots.” I
sidestepped the spew of Walsh’s breakfast, waiting until
he coughed out a gleaming red stone. Using a kerchief
to pick it up, I wrapped it carefully before passing it to
Dredmore. “Don’t swallow this.”
“I’ve no desire to.” He pocketed the bundle.
Lord Walsh fi nished vomiting shortly thereafter and,
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once Lucien had helped him to his feet, began to make
his own apologies. “I say. Terribly sorry. Must have eaten
something that was . . .” He trailed off as he looked at
both of us with visible bewilderment. “Do I know you?”
“Dad? What the devil?” A bleary-eyed Montrose burst
into the room, tottering a little as he rushed to his father’s side.“You can come in, too, Miss Walsh,” I told the woman
hovering outside the door. “Th is concerns you as well.”
Th e timid Miranda tiptoed in, her hands worrying at
the edges of her lace fi chu while she surveyed the messy
scene. “It seems my father is ill,” she said, her voice
wavering. “You should perhaps leave so that we might
attend to him.”
“Th ere’s nothing wrong with Lord Walsh anymore,” I
assured her. “I helped him get the spirit stone you shoved
down his throat out of his belly.”
“He will suff er some gaps in his memory,” Dredmore
added, “but they should not be permanent.”
As Miranda shrank back, I eyed the mess on the fl oor.
“You’ll probably want to have the carpet cleaned right
away. When egg yolk dries it’s as hard to comb out as
plaster on cashmere.” Dredmore got to the door before
Miranda and closed it. “Th ank you, Lucien.”
He leaned back against the door. “My pleasure,
Charmian.”
Miranda skittered away from him, going to stand
behind a wing-backed chair. “Monty, call for the
nobbers. Hurry.”
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“Dredmore is a deathmage, Monty. I wouldn’t twitch
an eyelash.” I went to Miranda, and dragged her over to
face the still-wheezing Nolan Walsh. “It’s time to tell
your father exactly what you and your husband have been
up to.”
“My husband is dead,” she protested, at the same
moment Lord Walsh said, “My daughter is a widow.”
“On the contrary, her husband is still alive and hiding
somewhere in the city,” I told him. “He’s probably too
young to be a Lost Timer, but I expect his Talian father
was.”
Miranda gaped at me. “My dear Lestin died in battle.”
“Your husband faked his death to get out of the
militia, come to Toriana, and—with your help—begin
the groundwork for the Reaper invasion.” I nodded at
Nolan Walsh. “While he didn’t have any powers for
Zarath to use, I imagine your father’s wealth, power, and
infl uence proved quite useful, once the Aramanthan took
control of his mind and body.”
Lord Walsh looked horrifi ed. “Miranda, what have
you done?”
A transformation not unlike that of an Aramanthan
possession came over Walsh’s shy daughter. “You think
money can buy anything, Father? We live every day
under Her Majesty’s grinding boot heel. Th e Reapers are
coming to save us. Th ey will muster our forces, crush the
Empire, and end the occupation. Toriana will fi nally be
free.”
“Is that what they told you?” Dredmore sounded
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scathing. “Th e Reapers have no motive to fi ght for our
liberation. Th eir sole interest in Toriana is to occupy it, and use its citizens and resources to ignite another mage
war. Had your plan been successful, Miss Walsh, they
would have burned their way across our country, and
installed their
own
tyrants as our rulers.”
“All Torians would have been bespelled and turned
into mindless, thoughtless slaves,” I put in. “Rather like
you.”
“You know nothing about our plans.” She struggled
viciously against my hold. “You think you can stop them?
It’s too late. Th e ships are almost here.”
“Th ey’re still a fortnight from shore,” I corrected her.
“By the time they arrive I expect the coastal fl eet will be waiting to greet them.” I glanced at Dredmore. “You can
arrange a proper reception, can’t you, milord?”
His upper lip curled. “Indeed.”
Miranda screamed something wholly unladylike as
she hooked her fi ngers into claws and lunged for my eyes.
I put an end to that nonsense by slapping her. “You
might have pulled it off , had you left your stepmother
alone. But you hated her for taking your mother’s place,
and you feared she might discover that Lord Walsh had
been possessed. It wouldn’t have mattered if she had, you
know.” I looked up to see Lady Diana standing in the
doorway. “No one would have believed her.”
“My father should never have married that sniveling
bitch.” Hatred contorted Miranda’s half-red face.
“Always pretending to be so kind and sweet and loving.
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All she was interested in was his fortune.”
“My family was.” Lady Diana joined us. “I married so
I wouldn’t end an old maid.” She looked at her husband.
“Nolan, I expect you have business to attend to in town.
If you would send for our physick before you leave, I
would greatly appreciate it. Montrose, please escort your
sister to her room and sit with her until the whitecart
arrives.”
“You can’t put me in hospital,” Miranda shouted.
“Of course not,” Diana soothed. “Th ere’s a lovely little
place called Havenwood, not far from my father’s country
estate near Settle. Some of the best families in Rumsen
have sent their troubled relations there to recuperate.”
Miranda grabbed her brother’s jacket. “Monty, you
have to help me. Please. Th ey’re going to ruin everything.”
“We’ll talk about it upstairs.” Montrose guided her out
of the room.
Lord Walsh gave Dredmore a desperate look. “My
lord, if you would be so kind as to accompany me, and
provide some explanation to our mutual friends and
associates . . .”
“It would be my pleasure. Lady Walsh.” Lucien
inclined his head that way, and then came to me. “Miss
Kittredge.” He raised my hand to his lips and kissed
it like a perfect gentleman. Th en he nipped one of my
knuckles. “I will be calling on you later.”
“Meet me down at the docks instead,” I murmured
back.
Once the men left the room, Lady Diana rang for the
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housekeeper, who summoned maids to remove the carpet
and apply citrus oil to the fl oor to remove any lingering
stains and odors. Th e butler himself delivered a tea cart
generously piled with a beautiful cream tea.
“With Lord Walsh’s compliments, Miss Kittredge.”
He bowed to me as if I were royalty before he addressed
Diana. “Milady, when the physick arrives, do you wish to
speak with him?”
“Not at all,” Diana said. “Inform Dr. Elgis that he
is to remove Miss Miranda and have her immediately
and securely transported to Havenwood for whatever
treatment she requires. You might mention that Lord
Walsh expects her stay to be of some duration.”
“Yes, milady.” Th e butler bowed his way out of the
study.
“What about the husband in hiding?” I asked.
“Lestin?” Diana picked up the teapot. “Without
Miranda to supply him with his needs, I expect he will
show his face here quite soon. We have footmen to deal
with that. Sugar?”
“No, thank you. Such an unusual name, Lestin.”
I thought for a moment. “An abbreviated form of
Celestino, isn’t it?”
“I believe it is.” She fi lled two cups and handed one to
me. “You might have warned me of your intentions this
morning, Miss Kittredge.”
I took a sip. “It is possible I could have convinced you
that Miranda was responsible for the attacks on your
person,” I agreed. “But the fact that she arranged for her