Authors: Deborah Smith
“So, lovely Contessa,” he went on, holding open the French doors, “as you can plainly see, we have much ground to cover!”
“All those years apart.” Halley shook her head.
“Yes, I’ve been damn lonely, my dear!”
“But the wild affairs, sir? Certainly the nights weren’t
too
lonely.”
“Wild only in a mechanical way, Contessa. Nothing could compare to the pure passion we shared!”
Their light laughter mingled as they walked over to the far edge of the stone patio and looked out onto the breathtaking panorama before them. The fiery ball of sun was settling on the far edge of the lake, seemingly held up only by the clear line of the horizon. Below, the rippling waters caught the fading light, and centered perfectly, as if by an invisible artist, a lone sailboat glided across the magnificent vista.
“What a beautiful sight!” Halley pressed her palms flat against the cool surface of the stone wall edging the terrace.
The Baron edged up close beside her and rested one hip against the rough wall. “It’s a wonderful place. Why Syl and Herb ever venture off the property is beyond me.”
“Are they good friends of yours?”
He nodded. “Yes, and more so. They’re relatives—Aunt Sylvia and Uncle Herbert.” He rescued two glasses of champagne from a passing waiter’s tray as he spoke. “And they coerce me into many of their gatherings. I think they consider my being unmarried a devastatingly lonely existence. But tell me, Contessa, how did you happen upon this soiree? I don’t believe I’ve seen you here before.”
Halley smiled. “No, you haven’t. I’m here by default, actually. One guest couldn’t make it, and a dear old friend of mine plugged me into the vacancy as a favor to the Harringtons. Apparently the mystery weekend needed all the characters to be a success.”
The Baron lightly tapped his glass against hers and flashed her a charming smile. “Well, it certainly needed you! Here’s to the Contessa-by-default. Long may she live.”
Halley sipped the champagne, then smiled broadly. “How appropriate a toast! What does one do if one
doesn’t
live long at a murder-mystery party?”
The Baron’s answering smile held a hint of a dimple in one cheek. “Oh, the important people—like you, my Contessa—will survive. The victim will be one of the acting troupe mingling so subtly among us. But, fair lady”—his thick brows drew together ominously—“we’re all
suspects
.”
“Aha!” Halley took another sip of the champagne. “So I’m cavorting with a would-be, could-be murderer?”
“But what does it all matter?” He moved closer to her. “We’ve found each other again, dear Contessa, and
that’s
all that matters.” His husky laughter hung in the warm evening air.
Halley rubbed her hands up and down her bare arms to ward off a shiver.
“Still cold?” One thick brow lifted in concern.
Halley shook her head quickly. “I’m fine, thanks.”
The Baron watched her closely, his eyes lingering on the rise of her breasts.
She recognized the look that played briefly across his face. What would he do when he discovered with whom he’d been saddled? Not a sophisticated jetsetter at all, not even a sophisticated lady of the night, as her friend Leo so delicately put it, but a librarian who ranked formal parties right below measles on her list of things to avoid! She hid her laughter behind a quick question. “Tell me, Baron, besides falling in love, what is expected of us tonight?”
“You can handle more? Well, dinner, I believe, and meeting and mingling, music and laughter, that sort of thing.”
“And the murder?”
“Ah! I’ve probably got a real life P.I. on my hands.…”
He lifted one brow questioningly, and Halley tossed her head. “Not even close, Baron.”
He watched her intently and tried to read beneath the incredible emerald color of her eyes. More emerald, that was all he found. A deep, wonderful sea of it. But there was
something
different—enchantingly different—about the Contessa, he realized. The Baron smiled, then edged even closer. “All right, I’ll tell you about the murder.” He whispered the words conspiratorially into her ear. “The victim is out there somewhere. And the dastardly perpetrator of the crime is too. And the clues are everywhere—”
“I suppose we ought to see about finding them—”
The Baron grinned and stood tall beside her. “Yes, and I’m being terribly unfair to keep you all to myself like this. Syl will have my hide; she wanted me to introduce you around to the other guests in this little drama. I guess I’ll have to share you.” He took her hand and tucked it inside the crook of his arm. “But only for a while. After all, we have all those lost years to catch up on, my lovely Tessa.”
My lovely Tessa
… Halley basked in the fantasy of it all for a second, then smoothly swept across the room on his arm, her eyes lustrous and her head held high.
As they approached each group, Halley noticed the admiring looks, the questioning brows that indicated the people were wondering who she
really
was, but the Baron introduced her only as the Contessa, and before long, Halley began to feel as if her slippers were made of glass and her pumpkin were waiting just outside the door. She had a
long
time to go before midnight.
Dinner was a whirlwind of animated conversation and rich food served at round, linen-draped tables. Dozens of servants hovered over the guests, and a string quartet played on a small balcony off the dining room.
There were twenty-four guests in all, and Halley marveled at how eagerly each one of them fell into his or her role. There was a proper spinster, a fading movie star, and, of course, a butler among the guests, and near her at her table sat a Mafia don in black tie, chewing a fat cigar. Kids playing dress-up and finding unexpected delight in being someone else, she mused. Just as she was doing.
Her glance swept around the elegant table for the twentieth time that night and paused as it had each time on the profile of the magnificent Baron, sitting directly to her left. It would have been hard not to look at him, so imposing a presence was he. Halley Finnegan’s Baron—for two days. The thought sent unexpected chills up and down her spine. Who was he really, beneath the elegant tux and lovely talk? He fit the role of baron so perfectly, it was difficult to think of him as anyone else. Most of the guests had greeted him warmly and familiarly, some slipping and calling him Nick. Nick the Baron, with the laughing, dark eyes and the splash of gray at his temples. He was laughing now at something the older woman on his left had said, and Halley watched him over the rim of her wineglass.
A deep, bellowing voice interrupted her thoughts. Herb Harrington leaned toward her, the buttons of his four-star general’s costume straining against his chest. “Ah, the Contessa is enjoying herself. Good!”
Halley pushed her thoughts to the back of her mind and nodded to her host. “Leo Thorne was right on target, Mr. Harrington. Your parties
are
unusual! This is the nicest group of could-be murderers I’ve mingled with in some time.”
He laughed heartily and patted her hand. “Well, Syl and I like a good time, Contessa. Yes, we do. And the Baron, is he introducing you to people?”
“Oh, yes. Baron von Bluster certainly seems to know his way around.”
“Ah, so I see his reputation can’t stay under wraps, even under that baronial title.”
Halley shook her head quickly. “Oh, no, I only meant
here
. Everyone … well, he seems to know all the guests.” She glanced at Nick, but he was busy talking to someone.
“Oh, that he does! Yes, ma’am, the Baron knows everyone, right, Abbie?” Herb smiled at an elderly woman with clear brown eyes who was sitting to his right.
Halley had noticed her earlier with a distinguished-looking man who had thinning gray hair, and whom Halley assumed was the woman’s husband. They seemed to take special note of her when Nick had introduced them on the patio. She searched her memory for names, and when they came to her, she realized they weren’t using their real names, anyway. She knew them only as the once famous vaudeville team of Otto and Olive Bailey.
The woman smiled warmly at Halley. “Yes, the Baron does know many people. And you seem to be getting along well, Contessa. So the Baron is being good to you?”
Halley smiled. “Oh, he’s being very patient with me. I’m new at all this, you see. I—” She suddenly felt embarrassed. The woman was watching her so closely. It was not an unkind look, though, but rather one of intense interest.
“Well, young lady, I can see in our Nick’s eyes that
he’s
enjoying himself. That’s good.” She nodded her head carefully and thoughtfully.
Herb rested one hand over the woman’s and spoke kindly. “You see, Abbie? Who knows …” His voice drifted off then as he turned to summon a waiter for dessert, and the older woman’s attention was taken by the gentleman seated next to her.
Halley pondered over the strange conversation for a moment, then realized she simply wasn’t used to dinner party chatter, that’s all.
And
barons.
A gentle pressure on her leg beneath the drape of the tablecloth scattered her thoughts. For a fraction of a second she thought it was a dog, until a soft, very human whisper caressed her ear. “You’ve been giving far too much of your attention away to others, Contessa.”
Halley jumped slightly. “Baron, you scared me! Is that you playing games with my knee beneath the table?”
“Hmm, perhaps we should both go down to check?”
“Wouldn’t that be a perfect moment for the murder? No, Baron, I don’t think it’s a wise move.”
He nodded in mock seriousness. “You’re right, of course. We’ll save that until later. For now, though—” he cupped her free hand in his and pressed it to his lips—“ we can simply relax in the pure delight of being together.” His kiss lingered on her fingers long after she had rescued her hand and slipped it down into her lap.
A gravelly voice from across the table broke in. “Ho, Baron von Bluster, you have found yourself a lovely woman there, I see!”
Nick looked over at the Mafia Don and chuckled. He was really an Episcopalian minister and was obviously enjoying his role immensely. “Well, sir, the way I see it, we need to make this party a success. And the only way is to play our parts to the hilt.”
The plump man lifted his glass in wholehearted agreement, then swallowed its contents in a single gulp. “Right you are, Nick. Eat, play games, and be merry, for tomorrow you may die!” He laughed at his own joke, and Halley found herself joining in. He was having so much fun playing his role that it was contagious.
“So, lovely lady, who are you?” The Don sat back and patted his wide girth.
“This, Don Siciliano,” Nick said, “is the exquisite Contessa Ambrosia, named for the gods’ nectar and every bit as sweet.” Nick leaned sideways and kissed Halley gently on the cheek.
“Aha, the Contessa! How lovely you look. And how lovely for you and the Baron to have found each other again. Lovers should be together.” He chuckled merrily, then added with a wink, “You see, I read my invitation carefully.”
Halley felt Nick’s fingers once again doing tap dances on her knee. The silky material of her dress slid back and forth beneath his fingers, and she wondered how soon it would be before her labored breathing would cause her breasts to spill out of the form-fitting gown.
“Yes,” the elderly female vaudeville star chimed in from Halley’s right, not seeming to notice her plight. “I agree, Don Siciliano. It’s about time Nick—ah, the Baron, excuse me—found a love.”
Nick smiled at the woman, and Halley noticed it was a softer, more intimate smile than he offered to the others. The Baron cared a great deal for Olive Bailey, whoever she was.
Halley managed a smile about the time Nick’s fingers began a slow massage. Fighting him was simply too tiring, she realized as she bit down painfully hard on her bottom lip. And there was no need to, anyway. It was all a game … and no one had ever accused Halley of being a poor sport! Playing along was the only practical course of action.
“Yes, and being apart has been dastardly!” Halley announced with gushing enthusiasm. She wound her arm through Nick’s and pressed her cheek against his smooth tux, her face tilted up to smile at him with sensuous longing.
Nick grinned down at her and fingered a lock of silky hair. The evening was getting better and better, he decided. “Remember the last time we met?”
“In Antibes, wasn’t it, darling?” Halley asked, fluttering her eyelashes. Antibes—where
was
Antibes, anyway?
“Hell, why couldn’t
I
have been cast as a baron?” the butler complained. “Care to trade, sir?”
“Not on your life! It’s about time I got lucky.” Nick wrapped his arm around the back of her chair, and his fingers pressed lightly on the bare flesh of her upper arm. “And my Tessa here is about the most beautiful good-luck charm a man could hope for.”
His look invited a response, and Halley smiled a sophisticated, sexy, contessalike smile at him that surprised even herself.
A shuffling of chairs and the ringing of a tiny silver bell by Herb Harrington quieted the guests, and Herb rose from his seat.
“Welcome, friends,” he said in deep Shakespearean tones. “By now you have probably all met, but I’d like to introduce you one more time, just in case you may have missed one or two of our treasured guests. Take careful note as I do”—his voice plunged ominously—“ because right here among us we have someone who will no longer be here on the morrow, and another who is responsible for his or her demise.”
A ripple of laughter swept through the room, then Herb went on, introducing each guest and following up the introduction with a humorous note about the character.
Halley was introduced right after a Russian Czar, and she managed to keep her smile bright and level, even during Herb’s declaration that she “and the Baron could certainly be using their reconciliation as a front to plot something far more dangerous.” Nothing, she knew with clear certainty, could be more dangerous than a “reconciliation” with the mysterious Baron.
“And now,” Herb continued, his eyes sparkling brightly, “the party will continue outdoors with music and dancing and boat rides. As you mingle, you are to keep your ears and eyes open to hints and clues. And once the crime is committed, no matchbook cover should go unchecked, no torn business card overlooked, no strange packages left unopened. And … no guest should be overlooked as a possible suspect.”