by Lisa Chaplin
Fulton thrust out his jaw. If his demonstration was successful, the English spies that dogged his steps would report to their masters, and England wouldn’t dare resume war. God must surely smile on that? “Light the fuse, Nathaniel, and seal it. Release the carcass on my count, Fleuret.”
His assistant Nathaniel Sargent lit the two-foot-long fuse wick—three minutes burning time—pushed it inside and sealed the slender bomb with a thick cork. The entire bomb had been dipped in tallow to keep everything watertight. Sargent dripped hot tallow over the cork and pushed it in hard. A minute later, he pressed the wax and nodded. “It’s ready.”
His bomb maker, Fleuret, pulled back the spring of the propulsion chamber as far as it would go—three feet, no mean feat in a craft so small. The spring gained strength. One two . . . oh, please, Lord, don’t let the fuse burn too quickly, it will kill us all . . . three four—“Now!”
The spring hit the square of steel at the far end of the chamber, propelling the bomb-release catch. The bomb flew out of the chamber into the water—but it acted on Nautilus like the recoil of a pistol. All three men flew backward, trying to grab at the pole Fulton had soldered lengthways throughout the craft. He scrambled to his feet, looked through the window, and began the count. “One hundred, two hundred, three—” Long before he’d made it to ten, he saw the little bomb bouncing to surface. “Back up and submerge as fast as you can!”
“How close?” Fleuret leaped across the craft to reach the pump after being thrown back. Sargent jerked the propeller cranks with the haste of terrified knowledge—disaster was imminent. Again.
“It surfaced by driftwood, only twenty feet away!” As Fulton dove toward the rudder, blinding light and a boom filled the submersible. The harmless driftwood became spear-shaped shards flying right at them. The windows shattered. A torrent of seawater cascaded in.
JAMES FLYNN WATCHED AS twelve men rowed to retrieve what remained of Nautilus and its crew. Four men were pulling diving bells over their heads, attaching them to the underwater suits they already wore. Another two were tying grappling hooks to the launch boat.
Crowds milled around the shore, laughing at the American’s latest disaster. Fulton had had many successes, and they’d been spectacular; but his failures, so ridiculed by their first consul, really were funny. But failing before Minister Decrés’s secretary had killed any hope Fulton had left of funding from the first consul.
By the time an hour had passed, the shoreline was almost empty. The divers had found the sunken submersible, and it was being rowed back to land with the grappling hooks. The minister’s man was long gone. Sundry spies—Flynn had noted royalist, Jacobin, and Bonaparte’s and Fouché’s ghosts in different places around the harbor—had left to report to their masters.
In his disappointment, Fulton seemed to need an outlet for his fury. Having draped a blanket across his friend’s shoulders, the famous scientist Monge stiffened when Fulton spoke. Moments later Fulton stood frozen as Monge left, taking what was probably Fulton’s last hope of gaining French funding with him.
Monge spoke to Fulton’s assistants. Fulton stormed away when he saw the two men follow Monge to the carriage, trailing their wet blankets.
If there was ever a time to fulfill his mission, it was now. Flynn slipped down the docks, toward the inns, rather than the taverns and whorehouses behind the warehouses, in Fulton’s wake. The man was too fastidious to consort with harlots, too religious to drink laudanum or frequent taverns. He’d guess it likely the American was drowning his sorrows in a coffeepot.
He ran the man to ground in a coffeehouse as expected. Looking like a bespectacled drowned kitten, Fulton was grumbling into a pot of chocolate. So Fulton had a sweet tooth—but his air of gloom told Flynn the chocolate wasn’t giving much comfort.
Flynn approached as he’d been instructed, his released curls both halting any thought that he was a sailor and emphasizing his youth. He bit his lip over an eager smile, with the air of a puppy. “M’sieur Fulton, I am a great admirer of your work.”
With quiet precision Fulton put the cup down and refilled it from the pot keeping warm on a contraption over a fat candle stub. “I’d prefer to be alone, if you don’t mind, monsieur. It’s been a trying morning.”
“I understand,” Flynn said, sounding downcast. “I was there this morning, m’sieur. I was so hoping you’d make it. I wanted to say, don’t give up. You’re so close now—and it’s obvious by what that man said as he climbed into the fancy coach, he thinks so too—”
Fulton’s eyes blazed behind the goggles. “What did he say, and to whom?”
Flynn blinked. “I’m not certain who the other man was, m’sieur—he remained inside the coach. But the important man said your invention could most likely work in the hands of experienced naval engineers—”
Fulton whitened, and he huffed in choppy breaths. “Not until I am dead, Monsieur Decrés,” he muttered, his gentle eyes hard, “and you can bank on that, as surely as you banked on taking my inventions without payment!”
The inventor downed his chocolate and stormed out.
Left to pay the reckoning, Flynn chuckled. Mission accomplished, and far easier than he’d hoped. Fulton’s paranoia had grown to legendary proportions as First Consul Bonaparte became more important, and less inclined to pay for what he wanted. The American’s excellent mind would ensure he disappeared before Boney’s men came to confiscate his life’s work. One of their French recruits awaited the inventor at home to make Fulton an offer he couldn’t refuse.
Stage three was up to the commander, and the girl he’d found.
CHAPTER 8
Tavern Le Boeuf, Abbeville, France
August 26, 1802
THE STRANGER WAS BACK.
For the past seven nights a different man waited outside Le Boeuf beside the horse. When she’d backed away the first time, he’d said the words tide watcher and handed her a note.
Madame, please accept John’s escort for a few days. I will return soon.
This John was a man of few words but kept his pistols ready. As they walked home, he constantly watched for signs of trouble, but there had been none. At the door of the pension he’d helped her off the horse, bowed, and vanished into the night.
But tonight her stranger sat at a well-lit table by the fire. He’d left his cloak on, probably so she could identify him. He couldn’t know she’d already recognized him by his height and breadth, and the slight hunch of his left shoulder she’d noticed the other night.
Seeing her watching him, he moved his cloak to reveal the knee breeches, waistcoat, and cravat of the socially conscious, up-and-coming businessman. His waistcoat had too much embroidery on it. He ate ragout and swallowed ale with seeming gusto, yet the effect was the same: no sense of belonging. A purebred Arabian in a peasant’s stable. Nothing but the cloak sat right on him.
Why was he showing her his face? What had changed?
Though she sensed a trap, she kept looking whenever she passed. She held him feature by feature in her memory, as if putting a puzzle of the world together.
He was younger than she’d supposed, perhaps thirty. His black hair was thick and tumbled, caught back in a naval riband. In the shadows cast by the warm, dark room and his hair it was hard to tell, but she thought his heavy-lidded eyes were brown. His brows soared toward his temples like raven’s wings. He had a heavy nose, sharp-defined cheekbones, and a tense mouth above a chin with a cleft.
It was a striking if not handsome face. The scars on his cheeks drew her gaze. The left side had the worst injuries, with slashing cuts and the melted flesh of imperfectly healed burns concentrated near the ear. The other side had older cuts close to his mouth, and one by his eye.
A brave face with haunted eyes. Did all King’s Men have that on-the-road-to-damnation look? How many times had she seen the self-loathing and desperate need to forget on her father’s face whenever he came home? She’d never understood the expression until she married Alain. Until her fi
rst beating. Until she came to France and saw her first beheading. Until she could give no more than a pittance to hollow-eyed soldiers’ or guillotine widows and their begging children because, if she gave more, she’d have to whore herself to survive.
Until Alain took Edmond from her, and in the mirror, she’d found her father’s eyes in her face. Now she saw Papa reflected in the eyes of a stranger with lies on his tongue and suffering in his soul.
Her gaze flicked left. LeClerc and Tolbert were still at their table. During the past week they hadn’t approached her, hadn’t insisted she serve them, or even attempted to touch her. But they watched her, and the encore of their attack crept up on her from behind. She’d felt it all week, even with John in the tavern, or walking home beside her.
As if they’d waited for the stranger’s return, she knew it would happen tonight.
After his meal, the stranger sat back in his chair, drinking ale, in no hurry to leave. Louise flirted as she served him, but his gaze remained on Lisbeth. Fear slow-dripped down her back, tossed from the guarded expression in his eyes. Whatever he wanted from her in exchange for his protection hovered on his tongue.
Not without Edmond. Never without Edmond. The thought strengthened her.
At closing time he put a handful of coins down on the table, pushed back his chair, and crossed the fire-warm taproom to her. “I’ll wait outside for you, ma chère.”
The low tone had a carrying quality, again spoken with the subtle Spanish accent.
She heard chairs scraping back. Without hurry, he turned to LeClerc and Tolbert. She couldn’t see his expression but could visualize him smiling, fingering his pistols.
They hurried from the tavern.
“They’re planning something,” she murmured. “Be on your guard.”
He looked down at her, conveying something with those shuttered eyes. “I’m glad your throat has healed.” Still without urgency, he left the tavern.
Louise came to help her with stacking glasses. “So that’s why he wouldn’t look at me.” The buxom, dark-haired girl grinned at Lisbeth and winked. “Smart girl, keeping yourself for him. There’s something about big, fighting men, isn’t there? And his accent . . .”
It came to this. Either she accepted his protection or fought the likes of LeClerc and Tolbert alone. Either she accepted his proposition, whatever it was, or waited for Alain to find a way to kill her. She smiled at Louise, quick and unhappy, and kept stacking the glasses.
An hour later, she stepped out into the cool air of a dying summer night. Within seconds the stranger appeared on the path beside her. “Good evening, monsieur.” Since marrying Alain she’d learned to sheath her sword. She still had Alain fooled that she was her mother’s daughter, a gentle and refined lady well out of her depth, lacking intelligence and strength.
It was time to test this man out. To learn what he saw in her, what he wanted.
“Good evening, madame.” Again, as soon as they were alone, the Spanish accent vanished. “Allow me.” With cupped hands he lifted her onto the horse, now equipped with a sidesaddle. She settled onto it with an odd sense of happiness. It felt nice. Almost like she’d returned to the girl she’d been before she’d run off with Alain —Mama would say, the girl she ought to have been. A low-lit lantern hung from a short rope tying it to the pommel. A rifle hung beneath that. He was well prepared. “They’ve gone?”
“For now.” After fishing in his cloak, he held out his hand. “I believe you know how to use this.”
Not startled by this knowledge of her, yet disturbed, she glanced at the pistol. It was the daintiest she’d seen, with pretty swirling patterns engraved on the handle. “Is this—?”
His smile sat oddly on him, a door where a window should be. “A lady’s muff pistol, yes. It’s for you.”
The sense of wrongness reached down into her heart like an ice blade. Testing him was no longer an amusement. “Monsieur, while I am grateful for—”
He shook his head, with an imperative air that made her indignation wither half spoken. “If you cannot name me Gaston, call me by an endearment. We want people to believe I’m your protector.” When she opened her mouth again, he lifted a hand. “Protector is a word with two meanings, madame. Be sure I will never ask you to be my mistress. I will only protect you from the likes of them.” That dark, heavy-lidded gaze met hers, older than his years: the wounded warrior enforced her reluctant belief. “It’s primed. You have only one shot. Make it count.”
Unsettled more than she cared to admit, she nodded. Last time, he’d saved her from the unspeakable. Tonight he led her on an unseen dance into a storm. Riding while holding a pistol and looking out for attackers—what had happened to her? Every time this man came near her she fell into emotional and physical quicksilver.
At a crossroads, she had a choice: to follow his lead, to fall in with him, or to back away from the poison. She had the right to say no—and she would, if he asked the wrong question.
“Be prepared,” he murmured as he led the horse toward the town.
“Nobody will believe you’re my protector if I know nothing but your name, monsieur.”
“That’s reasonable.” He sounded restless, dissatisfied. “I am the son of Abbeville’s former mayor. My parents and sister were beheaded early in the Revolution. I escaped to Spain and served in the naval forces. I rose to the rank of first lieutenant. I returned to France a few days ago. I plan to become involved in local government like my father.”
“An interesting history,” she murmured in polite disbelief. “Do you know local politics?”
His gloved hands moved like a shrug. “I haven’t lived here since I was a child. Any ignorance on my part will be excused for a few months. In any case, I won’t be here long.”
Everything he said tonight left her unsettled. “How many times have you needed to adopt another life?”
“Choose your endearment, ma chère. I believe our furious friends are watching us from the alley to the left.” His hands held his pistols, straight and steady.
She glanced over and shivered. “Does this pistol throw at all, mon coeur?”
He glanced up, the hood falling back. His eyes gleamed with approval in the light of the fuller moon. “A little to the right, at this distance perhaps two inches. Can you compensate?”
“I hope so, mon coeur.” She let the reins fall. Holding the pistol, she used the left wrist as balance as she took aim at the men, controlling the tremors in her hand.
He aimed both pistols with his feet planted apart, left in front of the right. “Annoy my woman again at your peril, messieurs.” The words rang across the street, Spanish accented.
LeClerc stepped into the light. “You won’t shoot us for the sake of a stupid English bitch—”
The pistol dropped, aimed. The stranger pulled the hammer, tensed his body, and fired.
Lisbeth rocked back in shock with the explosion. The horse didn’t flinch at the sound or rear when the air filled with acrid smoke. Obviously a trained battle horse. Was the stranger cavalry, then?
A scream split the night. When the smoke thinned, she saw LeClerc sprawled on the cobbled street, holding one foot and howling.
Candles lit in windows all along the street. Silhouettes appeared at windows, but in seconds the curtains pulled back together. Memories of the Terror were slow to vanish. Nobody would risk becoming involved.
“You’re crazed!” Tolbert shouted. “Why did you shoot him? We only wanted some fun with the girl. If you’re happy to share, we can—”
The stranger dropped the second pistol to Tolbert’s feet. “Find your fun with a willing woman. This one doesn’t like you.”
Tolbert bolted, leaving his friend on the ground, moaning and weeping.
The stranger strolled toward LeClerc. “Are we done, m’sieur?”
“You wait until I . . .” When he saw the pistol turning to his other foot, LeClerc cringed further into the road. “Yes, yes—take her, I don’t want her!”
“Good choice.” He stooped, pocketed LeClerc’s pistol, and returned to where Lisbeth waited on the horse, openmouthed. “Take the reins, ma chère.”
Lisbeth scrambled to obey. Again he led her on a dance too intricate and changeable for her to follow with any grace, let alone attempt to change direction; but she hadn’t agreed to live the lie yet. A lady must always be honest. Somehow she couldn’t separate herself from Mama’s little truisms. He stubbornly remained the stranger in her mind. She couldn’t think of him as Gaston when it sat on him as ill as the overdone, merchant-class clothing.
“If they hadn’t told Delacorte about the other night, they will unquestionably tell him now,” he murmured. “Will he object to your having a protector?”
She blinked. “I don’t know.” She didn’t know how Alain would react to anything, because she’d never known him. She’d only seen the pretty façade he’d chosen to show her before their elopement, and the violent, angry man after.
He kept walking beside the horse. “You’re not safe here.”
Her heart took off at a gallop. “I told you, he burned my travel papers. Soldiers patrol every road in and out of town. The gendarmerie keeps watch on all foreigners.”
“I have travel papers with a name no one will connect to you. I can get you out of town. You can be in our homeland within the week.”
Our homeland. Although he’d slipped into his role hand into glove, this was why she’d felt such a sense of wrongness seeing his clothing, watching him eat, even hearing the name he’d given her. Whatever his name was, Gaston Borchonne was not it. This man was thoroughly British, and a gentleman.
Whatever he wanted from her, it was time to push her own agenda.
“Is this my father’s plan? Where have I been the past year—Scotland? That’s where the fallen girls go during their nine-month illnesses, isn’t it? You know I have a son, don’t you—Gaston? You seem to know everything else about me.”