by Galen, Shana
Alex had worked her magic, making Honoria look sallow and pock-marked with missing teeth. She’d been able to go out then, but she’d been terrified someone might discover her disguise and begin asking questions.
And so she stayed inside and hid herself away. She’d probably go home to London in a few days. What would she have to show for her efforts? Ink stains on her fingers and bags under her eyes. How was that any different from London? She’d been forging passports and papers to France for the last few years. Not on a daily or even a weekly basis, but a couple one month and a few more several months later. And then Monsieur Palomer had walked into her cramped chamber at the British Museum. She hadn’t wanted to hear his tales of the horrors in Paris. She’d read of them in the papers and that had been enough. But she hadn’t been able to make him stop talking, and something about listening to him recount what he’d seen was so much worse than merely reading about it.
His eyes had been haunted. He didn’t want to go back to France, but he felt he must. He had family and friends trapped in Paris, and he could not leave them to their fate. He wasn’t a noble but a drapery merchant to the nobility. His curtains had hung at Versailles. His factory had been burned and looted, many of his workers killed, and his family threatened. He’d been in England for business and was afraid to go back using his real name. He wanted to save his family and as many others as he could.
Honoria had made him the necessary papers and watched him walk out the door. She’d never seen or heard of him again, and she had looked for mentions of him or his family.
Had he died? Had he lived? Had he saved his family?
Did anyone care about all the innocent people trapped in the senseless violence of Paris? And if she did, what was she doing about it?
The next time an émigré had come to her with a request for false papers she’d made it known she wanted to work for the Scarlet Pimpernel. She didn’t even know if he was real, but if she was to go to France and help, she knew he was her best hope.
It hadn’t taken long for the Pimpernel to find her.
“Miss Blake!”
Honoria wiped her brow and rose to go to the door of the tiny room she shared with Alex. That had to be Dewhurst yelling. He would have bellowed prayers in church, and despite the fact that he was one of the sons of the Duke of Exeter, he had the worst manners of the lot of them.
“Yes?” She added, my lord mentally because even though they had no servants in the house and never any guests, they were careful as to how they addressed each other. They had false names, of course. French names, but though Ffoulkes was always reminding them to use the false names at all times, they rarely did when at home alone.
“We are for the market. A little shopping.”
She no longer believed they were actually going to the market. The first few times she’d been told this, she’d asked after their missing packages when they’d returned. Now she understood shopping meant a mission. She moved to the landing at the top of the stairs so she could see Dewhurst. He stood at the bottom dressed in the rough clothes of a revolutionary complete with a carmagnole jacket and a Phrygian cap on his inky black hair. He’d wound a red and white striped sash about his waist, where the handle of a pistol peeked out. His face had a light layer of dirt and grime on it, and if he looked a little too healthy, too well-fed to have stepped out of the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, no one would question him too closely. The dangerous glint in his eye tended to discourage questions.
That and the bloody pike he liked to carry.
“I do hope you find a bargain,” she answered. It was the accepted way for her to wish them good luck.
“Lock the doors and stay inside.”
“I will.” She kept her gaze on his face and not on the pike.
“Work in the dining room with the panel open. If anyone comes to the door—”
“I know what to do.”
“If he is one of ours, he’ll know the signal or have the mark.” Dewhurst narrowed his eyes, waiting until she nodded. “Even then, be careful.”
“Of course.” She’d heard it all so many times, but she didn’t blame him for reminding her. The Pimpernel himself might be in Paris right now. If he came to the door, she wouldn’t know him. She’d corresponded with him, even spoken to him on half a dozen occasions but she’d never seen his face, and the few times she’d caught a glimpse of him, he’d been in disguise.
“What if something goes wrong?” she asked.
Dewhurst had been about to turn and walk away, but now he paused and gave her a long look. He had dark eyes, and they looked even darker in the enclosed space of the stairwell.
“It won’t. Au revoir.”
“Au revoir. Bon chance.”
She heard a rumble of voices, the sound of the door, and then she was alone. Left behind, as usual.
She started back up the steps and made the mistake of peeking into the drawing room.
Left behind to clean up the mess. With a sigh, she bent to pick up a fallen pillow.
LAURENT LOOKED UP THROUGH a haze of sweat and blood and into the face of the devil. The devil was not a horned red creature with a forked tail, as the painters made him out to be. Neither was he the golden angel fallen from heaven. The devil was the frenzied mob butchering the helpless inmates of La Force.
The devil was the peasants of France.
He’d closed his eyes then, giving in to the peace that would come with death. If hell had come to earth, certainly death could be no worse. The shrieks and groans faded away, and he felt only the warmth of the sun and the cool of the breeze on his face.
“Citoyen Bourgogne.”
Something sharp prodded his ribs.
“Open your eyes. Citoyen, wake up.”
“He’s dead. Leave him.”
The voices crashed over him, rousing him from the only peace he’d known in months.
“He’s awake.”
Laurent opened his eyes and scowled at the men looking down at him. One glance beyond them told him he was no longer in the prison courtyard. Where was he? Where was the mob? Perhaps this was the mob. Perhaps they’d saved him for last.
“Well,” he rasped. “Go ahead and kill me.”
“It’s tempting,” said a tall man with dark hair, who was dressed in the revolutionary garb of sans coulottes and carmagnole. He was larger and healthier than most peasants. His shoulders strained his dingy brown shirt, hinting at muscles and power beneath. His size and strength meant he wielded more authority. That and he had a pistol. At one time in his life, Laurent would have given his right hand for a pistol.
Laurent stared at the pistol. “Can you shoot straight, citoyen?”
“As an arrow,” the man answered, his accent not that of the poorer faubourgs like Saint-Antoine but not that of Versailles either.
Laurent squared his shoulders. “Then do it. Right between the eyes or through the heart is preferred, though I doubt you care for my wishes.”
“Not particularly, no. You deserved to die at the hands of those lunatics, but I saved you.”
“For the guillotine?” Laurent asked. It was a stupid question, but clearly some peasant had damaged his head. Laurent’s temple throbbed, and he had a vague memory of a wooden axe handle coming down on him. He’d lost too much blood. Why else would he believe this revolutionary had come to save him?
“I saved you for him.” The man grabbed Laurent’s hand and pressed what felt like foolscap into it. “Now stand.”
He roughly yanked Laurent to his knees. The world rushed at him, green and brown and red, but he managed to stay on his feet. He was no longer inside the gates of La Force. He was free and weaving along an alley. If the muted sounds of violence in the distance were any indication, he was not far from La Force and the mob carnage being wrought there.
At the end of the alleyway, the big revolutionary pushed Laurent toward two men standing at the corner of the courtyard wall. One had auburn hair peeking out from under a rag on his head and the other blond
hair under a cocked hat. Three men. Laurent thought he might have a chance to escape them...except for that pistol.
Just then a fourth man ran full tilt from the adjoining street. He was dressed in sans coulottes and carmagnole like the first. “Lads! This wye. We hae a problem.”
Laurent couldn’t place the accent at first—French tinged with Scottish? A Scot?
“You too!” The Scot pointed to the revolutionary pushing Laurent. “Leave him.”
“Bloody hell,” the revolutionary growled in English. Then he reached into his blood-stained vest and pulled out a slip of paper. “This is a house where you’ll be safe,” he said in French. “Go now, but stay off the main avenues.”
Laurent took the paper. “And if I don’t go to this house?”
The revolutionary gave him a hard look before running after his compatriots. “Then don’t expect to survive until tomorrow,” he called over his shoulder.
And he was gone.
Laurent leaned against the wall of the alley, his head throbbing even worse now, and opened the paper.
6 Rue du Jour
Laurent did not move. One moment he had been inside the prison courtyard, fighting the mob climbing over the walls and crashing through what should have been a locked gate. The next moment he was free and being told to go to a house on the Rue du Jour.
He had the urge to return to the prison. Perhaps he could save some of the women and children, and when he died, take a few of the revolutionaries with him. But he remembered the last images of the courtyard before he’d closed his eyes. He’d watched as two women tore at the dress and hair of Camille. She was covered in blood, and he’d hoped she was no longer alive. Once, in another life, when he’d been the Marquis de Montagne and she the Vicomtesse de la Chapelle they’d danced in the gardens of Versailles and sipped champagne. He’d kissed her once, her lips as sweet with the wine as the strings of the violins.
There was no sweetness in France any longer.
It was too late to save the prisoners who’d been in the courtyard.
Laurent had a choice. He could lie down here and die or he could try to make it to 6 Rue du Jour. Whatever lay in store for him there, he did not think it was death.
Laurent stumbled out of the alleyway and tried to orient himself. It took a few minutes before he knew where he was and could start off in the right direction. He passed men and women hurrying along the streets. Most looked at him then looked away. They knew what was happening in the prison of La Force, but they’d do nothing to stop it.
Oh, the good people of Paris.
Laurent continued on, stumbling through the narrow streets, keeping his head down, ignoring the drops of scarlet that fell from his temple. He almost ran into the man who stepped in front of him, blocking his path. Laurent fell back as the man hefted a cudgel. “And what do we have here?”
The man was a revolutionary from the tricolor cockade he wore to his striped culottes. It would have been easy enough to stay down, to close his eyes, and allow this peasant to do his worst. But now that his head was clear, he remembered he couldn’t die. He had made a promise, and he had to live to fulfill it.
Laurent climbed back to his feet. “Get out of my way.”
“A noble,” the man said with a grin. “I’ve just come from La Force, and I’ll wager you did too.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about. I’m on my way home.”
“You are on your way to the devil. Mort à l'aristocratie!” the man screamed. His face, already marred with blood and dirt from the sweat of his labors, turned red. He raised his cudgel with a malevolent grin, showing his broken teeth.
This was not the way Laurent had thought he would die. He’d imagined he’d die from a drunken tumble into the Seine or from a wild horseback ride or falling out of the gondola of a globe aérostatique all his friends had been so keen to try. Death during a balloon flight would have been far more romantic than death from bludgeoning at the hands of a peasant with no care for dental hygiene.
Laurent simply couldn’t allow it. The peasant swung the cudgel, and Laurent caught the man’s wrist, stopping the weapon’s progress. The peasant’s eyes widened, and Laurent squeezed his wrist until he heard the bones crunch. With a cry, the man released the weapon, and it fell to the ground with a clink. But Laurent’s victory was short-lived. Windows opened and a woman screamed for the guard.
Laurent was no match for armed soldiers, and he began to run. He ran without looking where he was going, and by the time he realized he had outpaced the peasants, he was lost. He was thirsty and hot, yet shivering uncontrollably. He knew Paris as he knew the body of a lover, but when he looked about now, he had no idea where he was.
And then his eyes locked on the sign.
Rue du Jour.
Somehow, even in the chaos, his feet had known which path to take. Staggering with weariness, Laurent pushed himself toward the house at number six.
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Also by Shana Galen
REGENCY SPIES
While You Were Spying
When Dashing Met Danger
Pride and Petticoats
MISADVENTURES IN MATRIMONY
No Man’s Bride
Good Groom Hunting
Blackthorne’s Bride
The Pirate Takes a Bride
SONS OF THE REVOLUTION
The Making of a Duchess
The Making of a Gentleman
The Rogue Pirate’s Bride
JEWELS OF THE TON
If You Give a Duke a Diamond
If You Give a Rake a Ruby
Sapphires are an Earl’s Best Friend
LORD AND LADY SPY
Lord and Lady Spy
The Spy Wore Blue (novella)
True Spies
Love and Let Spy
All I Want for Christmas is Blue (novella)
The Spy Beneath the Mistletoe (novella)
COVENT GARDEN CUBS
Viscount of Vice (novella)
Earls Just Want to Have Fun
The Rogue You Know
I Kissed a Rogue
THE SURVIVORS
Third Son’s a Charm
No Earls Allowed
An Affair with a Spare
Unmask Me if You Can
THE SCARLET CHRONICLES
Traitor in Her Arms
To Ruin a Gentleman
Taken by the Rake (coming February 2019)
To Tempt a Rebel (coming March 2019)
STANDALONES AND ANTHOLOGIES
Mrs. Brodie’s Academy for Extraordinary Young Ladies (duo)
Stealing the Duke‘s Heart (duet)
The Summer of Wine and Scandal (novella)
A Royal Christmas (duet)
The Dukes of Vauxhall (anthology)
A Grosvernor Square Christmas (anthology)