hands touched, and they turned to move down the line, swirling among the other dancers in a quick, intricate rhythm.
He was a good dancer, light and graceful, but then she did not expect anything less after seeing him drive his phaeton. No jerky, ham-handed movements for him. He moved his horses—and his dance partners—with gentle persuasion, and made it all look easy. Calliope barely felt she had to move, so easily did he twirl her from step to step, spinning her until she vowed her feet left the floor and she was flying!
As they were separated by the design of the dance, Emmeline leaned close and quickly whispered, “Is he the thief, then, Calliope?”
As Calliope turned in a circle, she glanced towards Lord Westwood. Surely he had the fleetness to climb in a window, the strength to carry off the Alabaster Goddess. But…“I don’t know. What of Mr Smithson?”
Emmeline shrugged, and was spun away into another circle. Westwood caught Calliope’s hand again, drawing her near as they turned in allemande. “You are a fine dancer, Miss Chase,” he said, not even out of breath.
Calliope, though, felt suddenly winded as she stared up into his eyes. “I could say the same about you,” she answered. “Where did you learn such grace on your travels?”
“Oh, I am a man of many talents, Miss Chase,” he said, catching her against him for a moment, so very close she could feel the damp heat of his body, the tense strength of him. Their bare arms brushed together, and his skin was so smooth and warm. “You have no idea.”
No. But Calliope thought maybe she was beginning to have an inkling.
They slid back into their own places in line as the music ended, and Calliope ducked into a curtsy. Her heart fairly pounded, as if she had run a mile rather than just danced an easy reel. It was as if the earth shifted under her feet, an earth she had always been so certain of, and it had not yet re-formed. Perhaps it never would.
Westwood held out his hand to help her rise. She slid her fingers into his clasp, still warm from the exercise, and let him lead her from the dance floor. The ballroom was even more crowded than before, newcomers swelling the throng until it reached the very walls, spilled out on to the terrace and the grand staircase. Yet Calliope could hardly hear them for the humming in her head, could not feel their press, their clamour. She only felt his hand on hers.
“Did I tell you that you look quite lovely tonight, Miss Chase?” he said, so close to her ear that his breath stirred the loose curls at her temple.
Calliope shivered. “I—thank you, Lord Westwood. You did say I made a plausible Athena.”
“I would not be surprised if you started a battle right here, leading us to victory over the Spartans.”
Calliope laughed nervously. “I don’t think I could, Lord Westwood. Even Athena could not find her way through this crush. And I can’t find my sister. A poor goddess I would make.”
“Perhaps she went to peek at Artemis,” he suggested.
“But the Alabaster Goddess is hidden! The duke said she would only be revealed later.”
“Ah, yes, you did speak to our notorious host. Or should I say inadequate host, for I have not seen the man since I arrived.”
“Yes, I did see him, but not in quite a while. It was over there, by that Daphne…” Calliope paused, remembering the duke’s caress on Daphne’s cold cheek. “I would feel better if I could find Clio.”
“I’ll help you search,” he said. “This is a big house, to be sure, but she has to be in it somewhere.”
“Oh, would you? I don’t want to take you away from the dancing. Or the cards.”
“A mystery is always more fun than a game of loo, Miss Chase. And ‘find the missing muse’ should be more interesting than a dance—unless it’s with Athena, of course.” His tone was light, but Calliope thought she sensed disquiet in his eyes, in the tight line of his jaw. It made her own uncertainties stronger. She was very glad of his help, not at all sure she wouldn’t get lost in this vast mausoleum on her own.
Plus, if he was with her he couldn’t steal the Alabaster Goddess!
“Thank you, Lord Westwood,” she said. “I appreciate your assistance.”
“What!” he cried in mock astonishment. “Calliope Chase appreciates something about me? Never say so.”
“I won’t let it become a habit,” she said. “And I will appreciate it even more if you actually find Clio.”
“Then let us waste no time. I’m sure two instances of gratitude in one evening would be quite more than I could bear.”
He steered her adroitly through the crowd, deftly sidestepping human barriers and looming statues until they found their way out the ballroom doors. There were also people in the small foyer at the head of the grand staircase, and in the card room and antechambers, but none of them were Medusa. Clio was also not in the ladies’ withdrawing room, which Calliope checked without Westwood’s assistance. Nor had anyone seen her.
Even more unsettling was the fact that no one had seen the duke for quite a while, despite the persistent buzz of gossip about him.
Calliope rejoined Westwood in the foyer, removing her helmet from her aching head. The headache forming behind her eyes was pounding and persistent, insisting that something was amiss.
“Did you say you know where the Alabaster Goddess is?” she asked Westwood.
“I’ve heard a rumour.”
“I think we should look there, then. Unless you think Averton has a secret dungeon somewhere?”
He gave a humorless laugh. “I wouldn’t put it past him. But we’ll ask Artemis first.”
He turned on his heel and set off from the foyer, finding a deserted narrow corridor. Calliope followed closely as they left the light and noise of the party behind. The duke’s house was even more of a crypt than she had first thought, or perhaps more of a catacomb. An odd, twisting series of corridors and chambers. Unlike the Roman version, though, these catacombs held not human bones and ashes, but the bones of civilisations. A jumble of marble and basalt and mosaic, all piled together with no concern for the various cultures and time periods.
Calliope thought of her father’s own collections, so carefully labelled and placed neatly in glass cases. How much each piece meant to him, and his daughters, so much more than a mere beautiful object. More than something to possess and show off, they meant knowledge, a link to lives long turned to dust. A way to understand the past, or at least begin to understand it.
It was obvious from this opulent clutter, this clash of Minoan, Archaic, Classical, Egyptian, Assyrian, Roman, Celtic, that the duke did not see them in this way. Their true value was lost to him.
As was surely the true value of her sister. Wherever Clio was.
At that unsettling thought, Calliope stumbled, reaching out to catch herself on a stone Egyptian lioness.
“Ouch!” she gasped.
Westwood spun around, and her hand landed not on the cold statue but on warm, shifting flesh. His arm went about her waist, holding her steady.
Only she felt even dizzier now, pressed so close to him, than she had falling towards the ground.
“Are you all right?” he asked, his voice rough.
“Yes,” Calliope answered slowly. “I must have stumbled on something.”
“Easy enough to do in this warehouse.”
Calliope eased herself away from him, leaning back against the kore until she could catch her breath. “I was just thinking it was a catacomb.”
“A most apt description, Miss Chase. A pile of dead things, hidden away from the daylight.”
Calliope studied the reclining