dark after the departure of that single light. Charlotte didnât dare move for fear of touching people unexpectedly, and maybe in unexpected places, which would so not be Regency appropriate.
âShould we sit down?â Miss Gardenside whispered.
âI fear I would sit on you rather than the sofa,â Eddie whispered back.
âWhy are we whispering?â Miss Charming whispered.
âWell, we are in a dark room with a murderer,â said Charlotte. âNo need to alert him to our presence.â
âHo hum, poor me,â Mr. Mallery said somewhere to her left. âA murderer, all alone, and no one to murder. If only a potential victim would speak up and alert me to her presence.â
Miss Gardenside giggled.
âGot you!â Eddie said suddenly, seizing the ladyâs arm.
Miss Gardenside screamed. So did Charlotte. Stupid brothers.
âWhat? Wait! Do not start without me,â Colonel Andrews said, rushing back in, the candle flame bobbing. He placed the candle in a holder on the mantel. âWe are safe. The servants absconded, and the house is ours. Go on, Mallery. We will give you till fifty.â
Charlotte stood close to the candle and watched their elected murderer leave the room, his expression decidedly sneaky. Charlotte put her arm through Miss Charmingâs.
âWant to be hiding buddies?â she whispered.
âDonât be silly,â Miss Charming whispered back. âIf weâre together, it makes cornering a gentleman and accidentally kissing him on the mouth a lot harder.â
âOh. Right, of course â¦â
Colonel Andrews took care of the counting. âFiftyâ came quickly. Charlotte could see the indistinct figures of Miss Charming and Miss Gardenside bobbing with excitement as they ventured off into the inky house. The colonel and Eddie both wore dark jackets, and the blackness swallowed them up at once.
Stop it, Charlotte. This is just a childrenâs game. And you arenât a child. Youâre fine.
Her heart beat like a fleeing rabbitâs, but she left the safety of the drawing room and its single spark of light. She could hear the creak of steps and hurried breaths of the others, and she tried to make for the sounds, hoping for any companion in the dark. She thought she was on the trail of Colonel Andrews, but when she caught up with him, instead she found her own face in a mirror guarding the dining room.
âHello?â she whispered in the black. âHello? Anyone there?â
A rustle from the corner. Was it Mr. Mallery? He wasnât really a murderer, of course. Nothing to fear. And if it was Mr. Mallery, she could yell âbloody murderâ and get this game over with.
She reached out, feeling cloth. Her breath caught. His jacket? No, it felt like velvet. The drapes.
The sound of running feet upstairs sent her spinning, looking for danger. The drawing room and the safety of its candle felt way too far away. She started to run and slammed her leg into a chair. A cry escaped her lips, and she might have fallen, but hands caught her. She couldnât screamâher breath was already gone. But the hands were warm and righted her, one holding her hand, one steadying her back.
âAre you hurt?â Mr. Mallery whispered. She could hear his distinct tone in that whisper, even if she couldnât make out his face. âYour heart is thumping like a beast.â
She wasnât surprised he could feel her heartbeat through her back. She could feel it in her fingernails and eyelashes.
âYou scared me,â she said.
âIsnât that the purpose of the game?â he asked. âTruly, I am not certain, so perhaps you could enlighten me.â
âIâm as much in the dark as you are,â she said, then laughed.
He didnât laugh, but his hand moved on her back, a comforting kind of pat. It was so small a gesture but felt like fire on her skin, and instead of calming, the
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