He laughed, a full, rich laugh that wafted through all the splendid old oak and maple trees surrounding them. It was getting easier, sounding positively natural now, this magnificent laugh of his. Luther raised his head and snorted. Eleanor started toward him. He lifted his hand and she rubbed her nose against his palm.
He looked over at Miss Helen Mayberry—her dark-blue riding skirt stained and wrinkled, her riding hat askew, the little bunch of grapes in his jacket pocket—and said, “What if I told you I would prefer to be your lover rather than your partner?”
She took a step closer to him and stared him straight in the eye. “Have you no curiosity, my lord? Don’t you wish to know what this is all about? Don’t you wonder why I, a woman of infinite resource, am in need of a partner?”
“No.”
It was her turn to laugh. “I will say this for you, sir—you are certainly not short.”
“As in I haven’t swooned at your feet?”
“I can’t imagine you ever swooning at anyone’s feet.”
“I haven’t. Now, tell me what use you have for me, as your partner.”
She was searching his face, for signs, he supposed, that he would give her a full hearing. “Talk to me, Miss Mayberry.”
“This will take a while. May we sit over on that bench?”
She walked beside him, her stride as long as his, at least in her riding habit. Blond hair was creeping out from beneath her riding hat. He stopped her and tucked it back under. Then he took her chin in his palm and turned her to face him. He studied her upturned face. He rubbed a bit of dirt from her cheek. He brushed his palm down the back of her riding habit, smoothing out wrinkles. There were also wrinkles down the front of her that needed smoothing, but he controlled himself. “There, you are once again presentable. A partner—something I had never considered. What possibly could a lady involve herself in that would require a partner?”
She sat down, smoothing the front of her own gown and skirts. “It isn’t that I really need a partner, it is just that I need a pair of new eyes, and behind those new eyes I require a very sharp brain that would bring new ideas, new perspective. You would
bring me that and possibly more.”
“Tell me what you are involved in, Miss Mayberry.”
“I told you that I own an inn in Court Hammering called King Edward’s Lamp.”
“Yes, you told me. Somewhat unusual occupation for a lady, but I suspect you would try your hand at whatever interested you. Why do you call your inn King Edward’s Lamp?”
“I knew you would immediately peel the bark from the tree. I knew I was right about you. There is such a lamp, you know, called King Edward’s Lamp. At least I believe with all my heart there is. I discovered the myth of the lamp when I was still in the schoolroom. My father happened to come across this ancient text in an old chest shoved into the corner of a friend’s library. The friend had died and bequeathed all the contents of his library to my father. It was written in very old French, but I finally managed to get it translated.”
She was thinking about that manuscript and that lamp, he thought, looking at her face. She was looking beyond him, beyond the park, to something he couldn’t see or feel, something that moved her unbearably.
“Tell me,” he said quietly.
“Actually, I don’t know all that much, but enough, truly. It was an account written by a Knight Templar toward the end of the thirteenth century, telling how he had broken his vows to his order because of his love for his infant son. It seems that King Edward saved the boy’s life when three Saracen warriors were going to spit him and his servants on their swords. The boy was wounded when Edward rescued him. The king took the boy up before him on his war horse and rode with him back to his camp, which wasn’t far from a huge Templar stronghold.
“The Templar wrote that when he arrived at the king’s camp, he found his small son in the queen’s arms, being fed by her own hand, his wounds attended to. Such was his gratitude that he broke his vow of secrecy he wrote, giving the king a golden lamp that would make him the most powerful man in the world.
“Then he took his son and left the king’s encampment. The last line written in the manuscript was the plea for forgiveness for his crime against his order.”
“I remember hearing of a golden lamp,” Lord Beecham said slowly, looking down at his clasped hands between his buckskinned knees, “very, very old, that came to England and then was lost. Some old scholar at Oxford spoke of it to me. I had forgotten. But, Miss Mayberry, even that scholar was not at all certain that it wasn’t just another myth, a strange tale woven in, like so many other strange tales, with all the happenings in the Holy Land.
“I am willing to concede that the Crusades were extraordinarily brutal, that what men did to men will never again happen. But this is magic.”
“I don’t believe in magic.”
“I know it exists,” she said, leaning closer, her gloved hand on his arm. “I do not know if it is indeed some sort of magic, but I believe it to be. Otherwise why would the Knight Templar give it to King Edward? If not magic, then what is the lamp? Surely he would not give the king a simple lamp to thank him for saving his son. More than that, where is it?”
He continued to look at her, one eyebrow raised, saying nothing.
She drew a deep breath. “I finally found another reference to it six years ago. It was in the old Norman church in Aldeburgh that sits atop a cliff right above the sea. I have made friends with a good many churchmen and scholars over the years, telling them only that I am fascinated by myths that relate to the crusade made by King Edward the First.
“The vicar, Mr. Gilliam, in Aldeburgh told me that he and his curate had been digging through the remains in the old Norman church after there was a mud slide. He said he had found some very old parchments he believed would interest me.
“They were written in Latin. Finally, I was able to translate them well enough to realize that they were about the lamp. I tell you, Lord Beecham, I thought my heart would burst I was so excited. Robert Burnell, the secretary to King Edward, wrote them. I know all about Burnell. He was very smart, cynical yet tolerant of his fellow man, very devoted to the king. He says the king didn’t know what to do with the lamp, that he was at once afraid of its power and on the other hand disbelieving that it was anything more than just a Saracen lamp that was old and worn, that for some reason had come to be prized by the Templars and hidden away by them. He said he had never seen the lamp do anything at all until—”