The Husband Hunter's Guide to London

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The Husband Hunter's Guide to London Page 22

by Kate Moore


  Jane was not free to choose any gentleman unless she could unravel the skein of choices that made her someone quite different from the husband hunter she appeared to be. And really, she realized, as she looked in vain for the one face that would not appear, it was only one choice after all that she could not unravel—falling in love with Hazelwood.

  She had had no word from him since the night she had given him the book, neither had she seen Nate, the footman, in two days, but she supposed there was a plan, and that she would hear of it soon. She was ready to leave the Langford ball on her own two slipper-clad feet if she had to. She knew where Hazelwood’s club was and how to enter through the chemist’s shop on Old Bond Street.

  In the hours ahead, it was her duty to help Allegra make a triumphant return to society. Allegra, much recovered from her injury, still whimpered at bearing any weight on her head and grew easily fatigued. Instead of feathers and yards of ribbon, she had accepted Jane’s idea of threading a single strand of pearls among her curls. The arrangement made her look less like her mother and more like Annabel. Allegra had been all smiles at the effect until a comment from Philip as they left the house that she looked like a pirate’s treasure chest had knocked the confidence out of her.

  Now, the slow mounting of the Langford’s stairs on Clive’s arm left her fretful and shaken on the ballroom threshold as their party was announced. For a terrible moment after they entered the room, it seemed that no notice would be taken of Allegra’s return. No heads turned their way. No smiles greeted them. Clive turned a worried face to Jane as he led Allegra to a seat at the edge of the room, usually reserved for chaperones.

  “You’ll keep a close eye on her, won’t you, Jane?” he asked. His care for his sister since her injury had won Jane’s approval.

  “Of course.”

  “If she becomes faint or fatigued, send for me. We can leave any time.”

  Allegra clutched her fan, her hands in her lap, her head down.

  Phoebe snapped her fan open and said, “This night will be a disaster if she can’t even stand up.”

  “Mother,” said Clive, “come with me to the card room, and let Jane help Allegra.” Clive gave Jane one last pleading glance as he led his mother away.

  Jane sat beside Allegra, talking softly, until one of Allegra’s beaux glanced their way. He saw Jane first and looked as if he couldn’t quite recognize her, but the next instant he spotted Allegra and crossed the room to ask whether she had recovered sufficiently to grant him the favor of a dance. A smile of genuine pleasure lit Allegra’s face and the young man blinked as if he’d stepped into bright sunlight. He pulled up a chair and began speaking in a low earnest voice, making every effort to coax another smile out of her. In minutes Allegra’s old court of admirers had gathered around them. As the first set of the evening began to form, Allegra turned to Jane and gave her hand a squeeze.

  “We are grateful to you, you know, for coming to us. You’ve been kind to me when I did not deserve it. I’m sure Clive is most grateful because his situation was so hopeless before…” She shrugged. “He had to work for that tedious Lord Chartwell, and he hated it so. But everything is better now. So thank you. I have told all my beaux they must dance with you tonight, so you will never be without a partner.”

  Jane did not immediately recover from Allegra’s disclosure. Clive had worked for Lord Chartwell, in the very office through which information about her father’s journeys passed. Clive had been in a position to know in advance where her father traveled. And Clive had benefitted from her father’s disappearance. She was rethinking Clive’s actions when Eversley appeared and abruptly solicited her hand.

  She hardly knew what she did as they went down the set. She quickly lost sight of Allegra, but could see no sign of Hazelwood or his footman accomplice. She wanted to know whether Hazelwood saw Clive as a danger. Clive with his sister had called on her, introduced her to his friends, and taken her driving and shopping. There was nothing in these acts to rouse her suspicion, yet Allegra’s remark made her doubt her cousin.

  There appeared to be a conspiracy to keep her dancing, but she could detect no danger in Eversley’s telling her of his puppies’ progress, or Allegra’s suitor, Ainsworth, who was of a mathematical turn of mind, showing her a trick for remembering the pattern of a dance. Once or twice she caught sight of Allegra, her cheeks flushed with excitement and as yet no signs of fatigue. An hour or more passed quickly with no sign of Hazelwood. It occurred to her that perhaps he would send for her at the interval when the guests would be moving from the ballroom to the rooms where supper would be provided. She resolved to be alert for any messenger he might choose to send.

  At the end of the fourth set, the movement of the dance carried her to the far end of the room, and her partner, momentarily distracted by other acquaintance, left her. As she looked about for Allegra, she saw Count Malikov approach, his face grave and his manner earnest.

  “Miss Fawkener, I don’t mean to alarm you, but I’ve been sent to bring you to Allegra. She feels rather faint and is calling for you.”

  Jane felt at once that she’d been remiss. “And her mother?”

  “Clive is looking for her in the card room. They’ve taken Allegra out of the noise and confusion. I’ll lead you to her, if I may.”

  “Of course.”

  The count offered his arm, and Jane gathered up her skirts in a motion that had become familiar. She chided herself for losing sight of Allegra and hoped her cousin had not wholly undone her recovery with the exertions of the dance. The count deftly threaded a way around the crowd at the entrance to the supper room. At the great stairway, he led her down. In the entry, a footman stepped forward with her cloak and gloves as if her coming had been expected.

  “Oh,” said the count, “I see they’ve moved Allegra to the carriage already.”

  Outside in the dark, he took her arm and led the way to a waiting coach. When it opened, he motioned Jane to step inside.

  Jane halted. It was not the Walhouse coach. She realized she’d been duped.

  She backed away and collided with the count. Instantly, a cloth came down in front of her face and was pulled tight across her mouth. She tried to twist free, but was lifted and shoved stumbling into the coach. Her hands and knees hit the floor. Inside a rough man reeking of spirits and onions hauled her up and bound her wrists. He tossed her onto the backward facing seat, pulled a pistol from his belt, and aimed it at her with a steady hand.

  Jane froze.

  The count poked his head inside the coach. “I will see you shortly, Miss Fawkener.”

  * * * *

  Hazelwood waited in the shadows of the balcony of Langford House. Listening to the fiddlers, looking out over the dark gardens at the rear of the house, he let himself imagine for a moment dancing a waltz with Jane in full view of London. It was an idle fancy. Perhaps she loved him. He thought she did, but he could not, in good conscience, marry her. Marrying him would be social ruin. He had to keep that thought fixed firmly in mind.

  The musicians left off. Footmen threw open the balcony doors to cool the ballroom. Hazelwood pushed away from the balustrade, watching for his moment to slip in amongst the guests passing freely in and out. He saw his opportunity and stepped inside. Most of the crowd moved toward the great doors of the ballroom headed for the supper room.

  Once Jane was safe, he could report on what they had learned from her copy of The Husband Hunter’s Guide to London. Her father had mapped not only England’s friends, but also Russia’s, those caliphs and satraps who would support the Czar. The proposed Russian rail lines would pass through friendly territories along a river he suspected was the Oxus. But Jane could confirm that. He had asked her in his note to bring the map hidden in the Nelson painting. If she could not, they would piece together from her memory, each place her father had visited a friend and where he had identified an enemy. Jane’s memory was as
valuable as any piece of paper the government possessed. No more than two minutes had passed when he slipped into the appointed room.

  * * * *

  Clive watched from the landing as Malikov returned. He glanced up the staircase once and nodded at Clive. The deed was done. As the count had predicted, there was no trouble in removing Jane from the ball. The ruse of Allegra’s feeling faint had worked. Still Clive felt unsettled as if he had eaten a bit of bad beef. The affair connected him too closely with Malikov. The Russian was not, after all, a charming émigré with a longing for home. He was a man capable of using and casting aside anyone who stood in his way. Malikov knew ways in which Clive could be hurt. The situation was untenable. Clive needed to rid himself of his false friend. Some way to do it would come to him he felt sure. The more immediate problem was what to tell Allegra and his mother in the next few minutes when they inquired about Jane.

  * * * *

  The chiming of the hour by the mantel clock did not bring Jane. Hazelwood knew he could not have missed her earlier. He left the anteroom and made his way back to the grand staircase where guests leaving the supper room would pass. This time he looked for Allegra. With her golden hair she would be easy to spot, and presumably Jane would be close by. He glanced from one elaborate coiffure to another, but did not see Allegra or Jane.

  He saw Clive Walhouse opposite also watching the flow of guests.

  As the crowd bunched up at the supper room entrance, Hazelwood attempted to slip by. A hand on his shoulder stopped him abruptly, and he turned to see an old school friend.

  “Hullo, man. It’s Thorndike. Haven’t seen you in a proper ballroom in years. Are you back in your father’s good graces?”

  “Thorndike.” Hazelwood shook the man’s hand. “Still out of favor, I’m afraid, but not with the ladies, you see.” Guests streamed by, casting curious glances their way.Hazelwood looked for Jane.

  “Ah, wrangled an invitation, did you? Brilliant. Found that lady who fancies herself the mother of the next Earl of Vange?”

  “Exactly. But must keep it quiet, you know, ‘til the deal’s done.” What Hazelwood didn’t need was to be spotted by anyone who might take exception to his being there.

  His friend offered another hearty handshake. “Let me know when congratulations are in order.”

  Hazelwood nodded. Just then Clive caught sight of him and started.

  “Where’s Jane?” Hazelwood asked.

  “Allegra was feeling faint, and Jane is attending her.” His glance at the supper room door gave away the lie.

  “Try again, Walhouse.”

  Allegra chose that moment to pass by on the arm of Ainsworth. “Clive?” She looked from him to Hazelwood and back. “Have you seen Jane? She did not come in to supper.”

  Clive met Hazelwood’s stare. “Do not alarm my sister.” He turned to Allegra.

  “Let’s look for her. It’s not like her to desert you unless she’s stolen one of your beaux.”

  * * * *

  Clive could feel Hazelwood’s gaze on his back, but the man was powerless here. He could not provoke a scene in Langford House. Clive thought he had rid himself of Jane Fawkener, but she was proving inconvenient. She had been so from the first. It was her return to London that had set Malikov off. Clive had not bothered to think why, but now he tried to sort it out. What the count wanted was information, so it was reasonable to assume that Jane had information, and it must be valuable information at that, nothing like the letters and papers that Clive had handed over to the Russian in years past.

  Hazelwood was a further complication. His actions would make the count unhappy. Clive really needed a plan to eliminate the two of them. It occurred to him that he knew how to do it. First he would ask Pamela to forgive him for not keeping their engagement tonight. Then he would see his mother and sister home, and finally he would find Lord Chartwell at the man’s club. It was time to confess to his former employer that he had stumbled on a plot by the disgraced Viscount Hazelwood to betray British secrets to a subject of the Czar.

  There are two antidotes for the dizzying effects of a ball. The first is immediately to seek a genuinely thrilling experience. If a balloon ascension is not an available option, it is advisable to take a fast gallop over open fields and set one’s horse at a high fence. At the very least, the Husband Hunter should ascend Primrose Hill (see the map inset) and consider the sweeping panorama before her. The second antidote is to contrive a meeting with this paragon of gentlemanly excellence in the most prosaic of circumstances. You must visit him when he is felled with a cold, or observe how he handles a session with his man of business. Observe him shopping with his mother at the linen draper’s, or instructing his nephew in flying a kite. If he is as charming in the harsh light of day in the company of his family as he was in the ballroom, then you may permit yourself to like him.

  —The Husband Hunter’s Guide to London

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Hazelwood strode into the club, Wilde at his heels. They’d lost her. The count had her. Hazelwood needed a convenient heath or moor, a vast wasteland where he could howl out his rage and loss, not the coffee room of a gentleman’s club.

  It was his fault, of course. He’d been playing at being a spy. Already an outcast in London, it had cost him nothing to spend his nights in the lowest pits of sin and villainy. It had cost nothing to live in comfortable rooms, well-fed, well-dressed, and flattered. What had he sacrificed but the sponging house and the duns who’d dogged his every step before he’d accepted Goldsworthy’s offer? He’d liked the spying life so much that he’d made no preparation for leaving the club at the end of his term of service.

  Then, unexpectedly, when his time of playing the game was nearly done, Goldsworthy had dangled before him a prize he actually wanted. To have it, he now saw, he would have to lose at the spying game.

  Such a simple thing she seemed to be, Jane Fawkener, a thing that had eluded him before his disgrace. But to have her, to get her back from the enemy, he would have to give up the club, his friends, and his future. The thing that Malikov wanted was the map. And he wanted it not because it revealed those eastern caliphs and satraps friendly to England, but because it revealed England’s false friends, those who pretended loyalty but who would side with the Czar in return for power over their neighbors.

  The coffee room had never looked more welcoming with its lamps lit, a fire burning, the tray of punch and cups set out for the last drinks of the evening. Blackstone and Clare looked up from a document spread out across a leather ottoman.

  “Did you get her?” Clare asked.

  “She didn’t make the meeting. She left the ball about midnight, about the time Wilde saw Malikov gag a woman and send her off in a coach. Jane’s cousins didn’t know where she was.”

  “Walhouse?”

  “Lied.” He did not trust himself to say more about Clive.

  “So, do we have any idea where Malikov’s taken her?” Blackstone asked, getting to his feet.

  “Yes.” Hazelwood saw at once that he’d erred by stopping at the coffee room entrance. His friends stood ready to help him recover Jane. But he could not accept their help, as he was about to betray the British government. “Wilde followed one of her watchers to where the fellow’s been living on the sly. He can lead us.”

  “And if she’s not there?” Clare asked. He, too, was standing, with an air of impatience for action.

  “We find Malikov and apply pressure. Arm yourselves.”

  “Is there a plan?” Blackstone asked, sensible fellow that he was.

  “I’ll tell you on the way. Let me get my pistols.” He turned away and started for the stairs.

  Blackstone called up after him. “Do you want to send Wilde to rouse a coach for us?”

  “No need. Coachman’s waiting,” he called down. He hoped he had not given himself away. They trusted him. It was his
case. They would wait for him. He would have perhaps a quarter of an hour’s lead.

  * * * *

  By the light of a single lantern on a white stone hearth, Jane watched the smaller of her two captors prod the embers of a dull fire. He didn’t speak. He merely pointed his pistol her way to indicate his wishes. The scrape and clank of iron echoed in the empty room until he put aside the poker and applied a wheezing bellows. The hearth emitted a cloud of soot that made him cough and draw his wool muffler tighter around his face.

  Jane stood where she’d been ordered to stand, quietly clenching and unclenching her bound hands to keep some circulation in them. The gag that bound her mouth cut into her cheeks and dried her tongue. She found it hard to breathe steadily through her nose and impossible to swallow. Her scraped knees stung.

  They had not traveled far from Langford House. Jane had counted six turns of the unhurried coach, which had led them south and east to this apparently deserted house. A change in the sound of the carriage wheels told her they had entered a short, graveled drive. Then her captor had hustled her through a portico into the dark house at pistol point.

  He faced the feeble fire, his hands extended toward it as it started to burn. Its glow illuminated more of the room, which wasn’t as deserted as she’d first supposed. For the moment his pistol lay on a green baize table such as one would see in a card room but littered with papers. On the floor by the table was a traveler’s satchel. Around the table at the edge of the lamp’s dim light lay mounds of bedding as if someone had kicked apart a nest of blankets and cushions. On the blackened fender sat an iron pan and an object she had not thought to see in London, a small, long-handled coffeepot like the one she’d left behind in Halab. The smell of coffee lingered in the room mixed with smells of mold and rodents. She guessed that the heavily curtained chamber must have been the reception room of some lord’s mansion before its abandonment and ruin. Without turning her head, she tried to judge the distance to the nearest door. A quick calculation told her that her guard could grab his pistol long before she reached the door.

 

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